'Updating is only a good idea if it constitutes an improvement, as well, My Lady,' LaFollet pointed out. 'And it's not quite fair to say we haven't made any changes. If the record books are accurate, there was a time, in at least one league back on Old Earth, when the pitcher didn't even have to bat. Or when a manager could make as many pitching changes in a single game as he wanted to. Saint Austen put an end to that nonsense, at least!'

Henke rolled her eyes and sank back into her seat.

'I hope you won't take this the wrong way, Andrew,' she told the colonel, 'but somehow the discovery that the founder of your religion was also a baseball fanatic doesn't really surprise me. It certainly explains the careful preservation of some of the . . . archaic aspects of the game, anyway.'

'I wouldn't say Saint Austen was a fanatic about baseball, My Lady,' LaFollet replied in a considering tone. ' 'Fanatic' would probably be much too mild a term, from everything I've ever read.'

'I never would have guessed,' Henke said dryly, letting her eyes sweep over the stadium once more. The huge sports facility seated at least sixty thousand in its tiers of comfortably upholstered chairs, and she hated to think how much the place must have cost. Especially on a planet like Grayson, where what would normally have been outdoor sports required stadiums with things like air filtration systems just to protect the local population from the heavy metal contents of their own atmosphere.

Not that any expense had been spared on more mundane considerations when James Candless Memorial Field was erected. The immaculately manicured playing field was a green jewel, broken only by white stripes of the traditional powdered lime and the bare, rich brown earth of the base lines. The colors of the field and the even brighter colors of the festively garbed spectators glowed brilliantly in the protective dome's filtered sunlight, and the crowd was liberally festooned with team pennants and banners exhorting the home team to victory. There was even a ventilation system carefully designed to exactly recreate the wind conditions outside the dome, and the Grayson planetary flag, with its crossed swords and open Bible, flew from the top of one of the two foul poles while the Harrington Steading flag flew from the other.

She let her eyes rest balefully on those same foul poles for a moment, then glanced at the huge digital scoreboard projected holographically above the infield, and sighed.

'I know I'm going to regret asking this, but would one of you insufferable know-it-alls care to explain to me where that — ' she pointed at the scarlet numeral '2' which had appeared in the 'Strikes' column '— came from? I thought it was only strike one.'

'That was before the foul ball, Mike,' Honor explained brightly.

'But he hit it,' Henke protested.

'It doesn't matter. A foul ball counts as a strike.'

'But— '

Henke broke off as the pitcher delivered a curveball, which the batter promptly hooked foul over the third base dugout. She looked expectantly at the scoreboard, then drew a deep breath as the count of balls and strikes remained unchanged.

'I thought you said— ' she began.

'Foul balls are only strikes until the count has already reached two strikes,' Honor said. 'After that, they don't count as strikes . . . or balls, either, for that matter. Unless one of them is caught by one of the fielders, of course. Then it counts as an out instead of a dead ball.'

Henke regarded her sourly, and Honor grinned back. The countess glowered, then turned an equally disapproving expression upon the armsman.

''Simple game,' ' she snorted. 'Right. Sure!'

* * *

The Harrington Treecats lost by a score of eleven to two.

Michelle Henke tried valiantly to project an air of proper commiseration as the luxury air car swept up to the owner's box's private slip to collect her and her hostess' party. Alas, her success was less than total.

'It isn't nice to gloat, Mike,' Honor informed her with a certain severity.

'Gloat? Me, gloat? Me, a peer of the Star Kingdom, gloat just because your team got waxed while you and your friend the Colonel were so busy pointing out my abysmal ignorance to me? How could you possibly suggest that I'd do such a thing?'

'Possibly because I've known you so long.'

'And possibly because it's exactly what you'd be doing if our positions were reversed,' Henke suggested.

'All things are possible,' Honor agreed. 'On the other hand, some are less likely than others, and given the strength of my own character, that one's less likely than most.'

'Oh, of course. I keep forgetting what a modest, shy and retiring type you are, Honor,' Henke said as they climbed into the air limo, followed by LaFollet, carrying Nimitz's mate Samantha, and the rest of Honor's regular three-man detachment.

'Not shy and retiring. Simply a more mature and responsible individual.'

'Not so mature and responsible that you didn't name your team after a certain furry, six-footed celery-thief and his friends,' Henke shot back, reaching out to rub the treecat on Honor's shoulder between his ears.

'Nimitz and Samantha had nothing to do with my choice,' Honor replied. 'Mind you, they approved of it, but I actually picked it as the lesser of two evils.' She grimaced. 'It was that, or the 'Harrington Salamanders.' '

Henke looked up sharply, then spluttered a half-smothered laugh.

'You're joking!'

'I wish I were. As a matter of fact, the Commissioner of Baseball had already assigned the Salamanders name when the Owners' Committee and the Rules Committee agreed to expand the league. I had an awful time changing their minds.'

'I think it would've been a marvelous name,' Henke told her with an impish grin.

'I'm sure you do,' Honor said repressively. 'I, on the other hand, don't. Leaving aside the entire question of modesty, can you imagine how High Ridge and his crowd would have reacted? It would have been tailor-made for their op-ed pieces!'

'Um.' Henke's grin vanished at the reminder of the unpleasant political realities inherent in the existence of the High Ridge Government. Those realties had become progressively less pleasant and more personal, for Honor at least, over the last three-plus T-years. Which, Henke knew, was the real reason her friend had been so delighted to return briefly to Grayson to attend to her obligations as Steadholder Harrington. It was also one of the reasons Henke herself had shown such alacrity in accepting the invitation to spend her own leave as Honor's guest here.

'You're probably right,' she said, after a moment. 'Of course, in any properly run universe, High Ridge would never have become Prime Minister in the first place, much less held onto the office for so long. I think I'll complain to the management.'

'I do that every Sunday,' Honor assured her with very little humor indeed. 'And I suspect the Protector has Reverend Sullivan do the same thing, just to put a little more horsepower behind it.'

'Horsepower or not, it doesn't seem to be working,' Henke observed. She shook her head. 'I can't believe they've managed to hang on so long. I mean, Jesus, Honor, most of them hate each other! And as for their ideologies—!'

'Of course they hate each other. Unfortunately, at this particular moment they hate your cousin even more. Or feel sufficiently scared of her to hang together, come what may, in opposition to her, at any rate.'

'I know,' Henke sighed. 'I know.' She shook her head again. 'Beth always has had a temper. It's too bad she still hasn't learned to keep it muzzled.'

'That's not quite fair,' Honor disagreed, and Henke arched an eyebrow at her.

Michelle Henke, thanks to the assassination which had killed her father, her older brother, the Duke of Cromarty, and the entire crew of the Queen's royal yacht, stood fifth in the line of succession for the Crown of the Star Kingdom of Manticore. Her mother, Caitrin Winton-Henke, Duchess Winton-Henke and Dowager Countess Gold Peak, was Queen Elizabeth III's aunt, the only sibling of the Queen's father, and now Michelle was her mother's only surviving child. Henke had never expected to stand so high in the succession, or to inherit her father's title, for that matter. But she'd known Elizabeth all of her life, and she was only too familiar with the fiery Winton temper which the Queen had inherited in full measure.

Despite that, she had to admit that Honor had actually spent more time with the Queen over the last three

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