'I'm no soldier.'
'You could re-train, something on the tech side. And they'll certainly need back-up pilots, for sub-light, and the shuttles.'
Mayhew's forehead wrinkled. 'I don't know. Driving a shuttle and so on was always the scut work, something you did so you could jump. I don't know that I want to be so close to ships. It would be like standing outside the bakery hungry, with no credit card to go in and buy.' He looked greyly depressed.
'There's one more possibility.'
Mayhew's brows lifted in polite inquiry.
'The Dendarii Mercenaries are going to be outward bound, looking for work on the fringes of the wormhole nexus. The RG ships were never all accounted for—it's possible one or two might still be junked out there somewhere. The Felician shipmaster would be willing to lease the RG132, although for a lot less money. If you could find and salvage a pair of RG Necklin rods—'
Mayhew's back straightened from a slump that had looked to be permanent.
'I don't have time to go hunting all over the galaxy for spare parts,' Miles went on. 'But if you'd agree to be my agent, I'll authorize Baz to release Dendarii funds to buy them, if you find any, and a ship to bring them back here. A quest, as it were. Just like Vorthalia the Bold and the search for Emperor Xian Vorbarra's lost scepter.' Of course, in the legend Vorthalia never actually found the scepter …
'Yeah?' Mayhew's face was brightening with hope. 'It's a long shot—but I guess it is just barely possible…'
'That's the spirit! Forward momentum.'
Mayhew snorted. 'Your forward momentum is going to lead all your followers over a cliff someday.' He paused, beginning to grin. 'On the way down, you'll convince 'em all they can fly.' He stuck his fists in his armpits, and waggled his elbows. 'Lead on, my lord. I'm flapping as hard as I can.'
The docking bay, its every second light bar extinguished, provided an illusion of night in the unmarked changeless time of space. Those lights that remained on threw a dull illumination like shimmering puddles of mercury, that gave vision without color. The sounds of the loading, small thumps and clanks, carried in the silence, and voices muted themselves.
The Felician fast courier pilot grimaced as Bothari's coffin was carried past him and vanished into the flex tube. 'When we've stripped baggage down to practically a change of underwear each, it seems deuced gaudy to bring that.'
'Every parade needs a float,' remarked Miles absently, indifferent to the pilot's opinion. The pilot, like his ship, was merely a courtesy loan from General Halify. The general had been reluctant to authorize the expenditure, but Miles had hinted that if his emergency run to Beta Colony failed to bring him to a certain mysterious appointment on time, the Dendarii Mercenaries just might be forced to look for their next contract from the highest bidder here in Tau Verde local space. Halify had reflected only briefly before making all haste to speed him on his way.
Miles shifted from foot to foot, anxious to be gone before the bright activities marking day-cycle began. Ivan Vorpatril appeared, carefully clutching a valise whose mass was most certainly not wasted on clothes. Stripes on the docking bay deck, placed to aid organization in loading and unloading complex cargoes, made pale parallels. Ivan blinked, and walked down one line toward them with dignified precision only slightly spoiled by a list that precessed like an equinox. He hove to by Miles.
'What a wedding party,' he sighed happily. 'For an impromptu out in the middle of nowhere, your Dendarii came up with quite a spread. Captain Auson is a splendid fellow.'
Miles smiled bleakly. 'I thought you two would get along well.'
'You kind of disappeared about halfway through. We had to start the drinking without you.'
'I wanted to join you,' said Miles truthfully, 'but I had a lot of last-minute things to work out with Commodore Tung.'
'Too bad.' Ivan smothered a belch, gazed across the docking bay, and muttered, 'Now, I can see your wanting to bring a woman along, two weeks in a box and all that, but did you have to pick one that gives me nightmares?'
Miles followed his gaze. Elli Quinn, escorted by Tung's surgeon, was making her slow blind way toward them. Her crisp grey-and-whites outlined the body of an athletic young woman, but above the collar she was a bad dream of an alien race. The hairless uniformity of the bland pink bulb of a head was broken by the black hole of a mouth, two dark slits above it for a nose, and a dot on either side marking the entrances to the ear canals.
Only the right one still vented sound into her darkness. Ivan stirred uneasily, and looked away.
Tung's surgeon took Miles aside for last minute instructions for her care during the journey, and some acerbic advice on Miles's treatment of his own still-healing stomach. Miles patted his hip flask, now filled with medication, and faithfully swore to drink 30 cc's every two hours. He placed the injured mercenary's hand on his arm, and stood on tiptoe to her ear. 'We're all set, then. Next stop Beta Colony.'
Her other hand patted the air, then found his face for a brief touch. Her damaged tongue tried to form words in her stiff mouth; on the second try Miles correctly interpreted them as 'Thank you, Admiral Naismith.' Had he been any tireder, he might have wept.
'All right,' Miles began, 'let's get out of here before the bon voyage committee wakes up and delays us another two hours—' but he was too late. Out of the corner of his eye he saw a willowy form sprinting across the docking bay. Baz followed at a saner pace.
Elena arrived out of breath. 'Miles!' she accused. 'You were going to leave without saying goodbye!'
He sighed, and twitched a smile at her. 'Foiled again.' Her cheeks were flushed, and her eyes sparkled from the exertion. Altogether desirable … he had hardened his heart for this parting. Why did it hurt worse?
Baz arrived. Miles bowed to each. 'Commander Jesek. Commodore Jesek. You know, Baz, perhaps I should have appointed you an Admiral. Those names could get confusing over a bad comm link—'
Baz shook his head, smiling. 'You have piled enough honors on me, my lord. Honors, and honor, and much more—' his eyes sought Elena. 'I once thought it would take a miracle to make a nobody into a somebody once again.' His smile broadened. 'I was right. And I thank you.'
'And I thank you,' said Elena quietly, 'for a gift I never expected to possess.'
Miles obediently cocked his head in an angle of inquiry. Did she mean Baz? Her rank? Escape from Barrayar?
'Myself,' she explained.
It seemed to him there was a fallacy in her reasoning somewhere, but there was no time to unravel it. Dendarii were invading the docking bay through several entrances, in twos and threes and then in a steady stream. The lights came up to full day-cycle power. His plans for slipping away quietly were disintegrating rapidly.
'Well,' he said desperately, 'goodbye, then.' He shook Baz's hand hastily. Elena, her eyes swimming, grabbed him in a hug just short of bone-crushing. His toes sought the floor indignantly. Altogether too late …
By the time she put him down, the crowd was gathering, hands reaching to shake his hand, to touch him, or just reaching, as if to warm themselves. Bothari would have had a spasm; Miles rendered the Sergeant's spirit an apologetic salute, in his mind.
The docking bay was now a seething sea of people. It rang to babble, and cheers, and cheerful hoots, and foot stamping. These soon picked up rhythm; a chant. 'Naismith! Naismith! Naismith …'
Miles raised his hands in helpless acquiescence, cursing under his breath. There was always some idiot in a crowd to start these things. Elena and Baz between them hoisted him to their shoulders, and he was cornered. Now he would have to come up with a bloody farewell speech. He lowered his hands; rather to his surprise, they quieted. He flung his hands back up; they roared. He lowered them slowly, like an orchestra director. The silence became absolute. It was terrifying.
'As you can see, I am high because you all have raised me up,' he began, pitching his voice to carry to the last and least. A gratified chuckle ran through them. 'You have raised me up on your courage, tenacity, obedience, and other soldierly virtues,' that was it, stroke them, they were eating it up—although surely he owed as much to their confusion, bad-tempered rivalry, greed, ambition, indolence, and gullibility—pass on, pass on—'I can do no less than to raise you up in return. I hereby revoke your provisional status, and declare you a permanent arm of the Dendarii Mercenaries.'
The cheering, whistling, and foot stomping shook the docking bay. Many were Oser's latecomers, curious,