Behind him their jump pilot, wearing only his underwear and a sleep-stunned expression, jittered uncertainly.
'Dress later,' Ungari snarled to the pilot. 'Just get us free of the dock and run us out beyond the ten- thousand-kilometer limit. I'll be up to help set course in a few minutes.' He added half to himself, 'As soon as I know where the devil we're going.
The pilot fled. Ungari strode to Miles's bedside. 'Vorkosigan, what the hell happened in that hostel room?'
Miles squeezed his eyes against the glares of both the lights and Ungari, and suppressed an impulse to hide under the covers from both. 'Ha?' His mouth was dry with sleep.
'I've just gotten an advance warning—bare minutes advance warning—of an arrest order being put out by Pol Six civil security for Victor Rotha.'
'But I never touched the lady!' Miles protested, dizzied.
'Liga's body was found murdered in your meeting room.'
'What!'
'The security lab has just finished timing it—to about when you met. Were to meet. The arrest order will be on the net in minutes, and we'll be locked in here.'
'But I didn't. I never even saw Liga, only his boss, Livia Nu. I mean—if I'd done any such thing, I'd have reported it to you immediately, sir!'
'Thank you,' said Ungari dryly. 'I'm glad to know that.' His voice harshened. 'You're being framed, of course.'
'Who—' Yes. There could have been another, grimmer way for Livia Nu to have relieved Liga of that top secret vid disk. But if she wasn't Liga's superior, or even a member of his Polian criminal organization at all, who was she? 'We need to know more, sir! This could be the start of something.'
'This could be the
'From what Chodak said, I don't think Admiral Naismith would exactly be welcomed back with open arms,' Miles agreed reluctantly.
'Jackson's Whole's consortium station has no extradition treaty with anyone. This cover's gone completely sour. Rotha and Naismith, both useless. It has to be the Consortium. I'll ditch this ship there, go underground, and double back to Aslund on my own.'
'What about me, sir?'
'You and Overholt will have to split off and take the long way
home.'
Home. Home in disgrace. 'Sir . . . running away looks bad. Suppose we sat tight, and cleared Rotha of the charges? We wouldn't be cut off any more, and Rotha would still be a viable cover. It's possible we're being hustled into doing just this, cutting and running.'
'I don't see how anyone could have anticipated my information source in Polian civil security. I think we're meant to be locked up here in dock.' Ungari tapped his right fist into his palm once, a gesture of decision this time. 'The Consortium it is.' He wheeled and exited, boots tromping down the deck. A change of vibration and and pressure, and a few muted clanks, told Miles their ship was now breaking from Pol Six.
Miles said aloud to the empty cabin. 'But what if they have plans for both contingencies? I would.' He shook his head doubtfully, and rose to dress and follow Ungari.
9
The Jacksonian Consortium's jump point station, Miles decided, differed from Pol's mainly in the assortment of things its merchants offered for sale. He stood before the book-disk dispenser in a concourse very like Pol Six's and flicked the vid fast-forward through a huge catalogue of pornography. Well, mostly fast-forward, his search was punctuated by a few pauses, from bemused to stunned. Nobly resisting curiosity, he reached the military history section only to find a disappointingly thin collection of titles.
He inserted his credit card and the machine dispensed three wafers. Not that he was all that interested in
Ungari had arranged for the 'sale' of Victor Rotha's ship, pilot, and engineer to a front man who would deliver it, eventually, back to Barrayaran Imperial Security. Miles's pleading suggestions to his superior on how to make more use of Rotha, Naismith, or even Ensign Vorkosigan had then been interrupted by an ultra-coded message from ImpSec HQ, for Ungari's eyes only. Ungari had withdrawn to decode it, and emerged half an hour later, dead-white around the lips.
He had then moved his timetable up and departed within the hour on a commercial ship to Aslund Station. Alone. Refusing to impart the contents of the message to Miles, or even to Sergeant Overholt Refusing to take Miles along. Refusing Miles permission to at least continue military observations independently on the Consortium.
Ungari left Overholt to Miles, or vice versa. It was a little hard to tell who had been left in charge of whom. Overholt seemed to be acting less like a subordinate and more like a nanny all the time, discouraging Miles's attempted explorations of the Consortium, insisting he keep safely to his hostel room. They waited now to board an Escobaran commercial liner slated for a nonstop run to Escobar, where they would report to the Barrayaran Embassy which would no doubt ship them home. Home, and with nothing to show for it.
Miles checked his chrono. Another twenty minutes to kill before boarding. They might as well go sit. With an irritable glance at his shadow Overholt, Miles trudged wearily down the concourse. Overholt followed, frowning general disapproval.
Miles brooded on Livia Nu. In fleeing from her erotic invitation he'd surely missed the adventure of his short lifetime. Yet that hadn't been the look of love on her face. Anyway, he'd worry about a woman who could fall madly in love at first sight with Victor Rotha. The light in her eyes had been more on the order of a gourmet contemplating an unusual hors d'oeuvre just presented by the waiter. He'd felt like he'd had parsley sticking out of his ears. She might have been dressed like a courtesan, moved like a courtesan, but there'd been none of the courtesan's eagerness to please about her, nothing servile. The gestures of power in the garments of powerlessness. Unsettling. So beautiful.
Courtesan, criminal, spy, what was she? Above all, who did belong to? Was she Liga's boss, or Liga's opponent? Or Liga's. Had she killed the rabbity man herself? Whatever else she was, he was increasingly convinced, she was a key piece in the puzzle of Hegen Hub. They should have followed her up, not fled from her. It wasn't the only opportunity he'd missed. The meeting with Livia was going to bother him for a long time.
Miles looked up to find his way blocked by a pair of Consortium goons—civil security officers, he corrected his thought ironically. He stood, feet planted, and lifted his chin. What now?
'Yes, gentlemen?'
The big one looked to the enormous one, who cleared his throat. 'Mr. Victor Rotha?'
'If I am, then what?'
'An arrest order has been purchased for you. It charges you with the murder of one Sydney Liga. Do you wish to outbid?'
'Probably.' Miles's lip curled in exasperation. What a development. 'Who's bidding for my arrest?'
'The name is Cavilo.'
Miles shook his head. 'Don't even know him. Is he with Polian Civil Security, by chance?'
The officer checked his report panel. 'No.' He added chattily, 'The Polians almost never do business with us. They think we ought to trade them criminals for free. As if we wanted any back!'
'Huh. That's supply and demand for you.' Miles blew out his breath. Illyan was not going to be thrilled about
The officer checked his panel again. His brows rose. 'Twenty thousand Betan dollars. He must want you a