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Diplomatic Immunity b-13 Page 3
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Miles glanced at the cargomaster. “Did you know him, sir?”
“We met a few times,” said Molino. “I mostly stayed aboard the Rudra , but my impression of him was that he was friendly and competent. He seemed to get along well with crew and passengers. Quite the walking advertisement for assimilation.”
“Excuse me?”
Vorpatril cleared his throat. “Solian was Komarran, my lord.”
“Ah.” Argh . The reports hadn't mentioned this wrinkle. Komarrans were but lately permitted admittance into the Barrayaran Imperial Service; the first generation of such officers was handpicked, and on their marks to prove their loyalty and competence. The Emperor's pets , Miles had heard at least one Barrayaran fellow-officer describe them in covert disgruntlement. The success of this integration was a high personal priority of Gregor's. Admiral Vorpatril certainly knew it, too. Miles moved the mysterious fate of Solian up a few notches in his mental list of most-urgent priorities.
“What were the circumstances of his original disappearance?”
Brun answered, “Very quiet, my lord. He signed off-shift in the usual manner, and never showed up for his next watch. When his cabin was finally checked, it seemed that some of his personal effects and a valise were missing, although most of his uniforms were left. There was no record of his finally leaving the ship, but then . . . he'd know how to get out without being seen if anyone could. Which is why I posit desertion. The ship was very thoroughly searched after that. He has to have altered the records, or slipped out with the cargo, or something .”
“Any sense that he was unhappy in his work or place?”
“Not—no, my lord. Nothing special.”
“Anything not special?”
“Well, there was the usual chronic chaff about being a Komarran in this”—Brun gestured at himself—”uniform. I suppose, where he was placed, he was in position to get it from both sides.”
We're trying to all be one side, now. Miles decided this was not the time or place to pursue the unconscious assumptions behind Brun's word-choice. “Cargomaster Molino—do you have any sidelights on this? Was Solian subject to, ah, reproof from his fellow Komarrans?”
Molino shook his head. “The man seemed to be well liked by the crew of the Idris as far as I could tell. Stuck to business, didn't get into arguments.”
“Nevertheless, I gather that your first . . . impression, was that he had deserted?”
“It seemed possible,” Brun admitted. “I'm not casting aspersions, but he was Komarran. Maybe he'd found it tougher than he thought it would be. Admiral Vorpatril disagreed,” he added scrupulously.
Vorpatril waved a hand in a gesture of judicious balance. “The more reason not to think desertion. High command's been pretty careful of what Komarrans they admit to the Service. They don't want public failures.”
“In any case,” said Brun, “we put all our own security people on alert to search for him, and asked for help from the Graf Station authorities. Which they were not especially eager to offer. They just kept repeating they'd had no sign of him in either the gravity or null-gee sections, and no record of anyone of his description leaving the station on their local-space carriers.”
“And then what happened?”
Admiral Vorpatril answered, “Time ran on. Repairs on the Idris were completed and signed off. Pressure,” he eyed Molino without favor, “grew to leave Graf Station and continue on the planned route. Me—I don't leave my men behind if I can help it.”
Molino said, rather through his teeth, “It made no economic sense to tie up the entire fleet over one man. You might have left one light vessel or even a small team of investigators to pursue the matter, to follow on when they were concluded, and let the rest continue.”
“I also have standing orders not to split the fleet,” said Vorpatril, his jaw tightening.
“But we haven't suffered a hijacking attempt in this sector for decades,” argued Molino. Miles felt he was witnessing round n-plus-one of an ongoing debate.
“Not since Barrayar began providing you with free military escorts,” said Vorpatril, with false cordiality. “Odd coincidence, that.” His voice grew firmer. “I don't leave my men. I swore that at the Escobar debacle, back when I was a milk-faced ensign.” He glanced at Miles. “Under your father's command, as it happened.”
Uh-oh. This could be trouble. . . . Miles let his brows climb in curiosity. “What was your experience there, sir?”
Vorpatril snorted reminiscently. “I was a junior pilot on a combat drop shuttle, orphaned when our mothership was blown to hell by the Escos in high orbit. I suppose if we'd made it back during the retreat, we'd have been blown up with her, but still. Nowhere to dock, nowhere to run, even the few surviving ships that had an open docking cradle not pausing for us, a couple of hundred men on board including wounded—it was a right nightmare, let me tell you.”
Miles felt the admiral had barely clipped off a “son,” at the end of that last sentence.
Miles said cautiously, “I'm not sure Admiral Vorkosigan had much choice left, by the time he inherited command of the invasion after the death of Prince Serg.”
“Oh, none at all,” Vorpatril agreed, with another wave of his hand. “I'm not saying the man didn't do all he could with what he had. But he couldn't do it all, and I was among those sacrificed. Spent almost a year in an Escobaran prison camp, before the negotiators finally got me mustered home. The Escobarans didn't make it a holiday for us, I can tell you that.”
It could have been worse. You might have been a female Escobaran prisoner of war in one of our camps. Miles decided not to suggest this exercise of the imagination to the admiral just now. “I would expect not.”
“All I'm saying is, I know what it is to be abandoned, and I won't do it to men of mine for any trivial reason.” His narrow glance at the cargomaster made it clear that evaporating Komarran corporate profits did not qualify as a weighty enough reason for this violation of principle. “Events proved—” He hesitated, and rephrased himself. “For a time, I thought events had proved me right.”
“For a time,” Miles echoed. “Not any more?”
“Now . . . well . . . what happened next was pretty . . . pretty disturbing. There was an unauthorized cycling of a personnel airlock in the Graf Station cargo bay next to where the Idris was locked on. No ship or personnel pod was sighted at it, however—the tube seals weren't activated. By the time the Station security guard got there, the bay was empty. But there was a quantity of blood on the floor, and signs of something dragged to the lock. The blood came up on testing as Solian's. It looked like he was trying to make it back to the Idris , and someone jumped him.”
“Someone who didn't leave footprints,” added Brun darkly.
At Miles's inquiring look, Vorpatril explained, “In the gravitational areas where the downsiders stay, the quaddies buzz around in these little personal floaters. They operate 'em with their lower hands, leaving their upper arms free. No footprints. No feet, for that matter.”
“Ah, yes. I understand,” said Miles. “Blood, but no body—has a body been found?”
“Not yet,” said Brun.
“Searched for?”
“Oh, yes. In all the possible trajectories.”
“I suppose it's occurred to you that a deserter might try to fake his own murder or suicide, to free himself from pursuit.”
“I might have thought that,” said Brun, “but I saw the loading bay floor. No one could lose that much blood and live. There must have been three or four liters at least.”
Miles shrugged. “The first step in emergency cryonic prep is to exsanguinate the patient and replace his blood with cryo-fluid. That can easily leave several liters of blood on the floor, and the victim—well, potentially alive.” He'd had close personal experience of the process, or so Elli Quinn and Bel Thorne had told him afterward, on that Dendarii Free Mercenary mission that had gone so disastrously wrong. Granted, he didn't remember that part, except through Bel's extr
emely vivid description.
Brun's brows flicked up. “I hadn't thought of that.”
“It rather sprang to my mind,” said Miles apologetically. I could show you the scars.
Brun frowned, then shook his head. “I don't think there would have been time before Station security arrived on the scene.”
“Even if a portable cryochamber was standing ready?”
Brun opened his mouth, then closed it again. He finally said, “It's a complicated scenario, my lord.”
“I don't insist on it,” said Miles easily. He considered the other end of the cryo-revival process. “Except that I'd also point out that there are other sources of several liters of nice fresh one's-own-personal blood besides a victim's body. Such as a revival lab's or hospital's synthesizer. The product would certainly light up a cursory DNA scan. You couldn't even call it a false positive, exactly. A bio-forensics lab could tell the difference, though. Traces of cryo-fluid would be obvious, too, if only someone thought to look for them.” He added wistfully, “I hate circumstantial evidence. Who ran the identification check on the blood?”
Brun shifted uncomfortably. “The quaddies. We'd downloaded Solian's DNA scan to them when he first went missing. But the security liaison officer from the Rudra had gone over by then—he was right there in the bay watching their tech. He reported the match to me as soon as the analyzer beeped. That's when I podded across to look at it all myself.”
“Did he collect another sample to cross-check?”
“I . . . believe so. I can ask the fleet surgeon if he received one before, um, other events overtook us.”
Admiral Vorpatril sat looking unpleasantly stunned. “I thought certainly poor Solian was murdered. By some—” He fell silent.
“It doesn't sound as though that hypothesis is ruled out either, yet,” Miles consoled him. “In any case, you honestly believed it at the time. Have your fleet surgeon examine his samples more thoroughly, please, and report to me.”
“And to Graf Station Security, too?”
“Ah . . . maybe not them yet.” Even if the results were negative, the query would only serve to stir up more quaddie suspicions about Barrayarans. And if they were positive . . . Miles wanted to think about that first. “At any rate, what happened next?”
“That Solian was himself Fleet Security made his murder—apparent murder—seem especially sinister,” Vorpatril admitted. “Had he been trying to get back with some warning? We couldn't tell. So I canceled all leaves, went to alert status, and ordered all ships to detach from dockside.”
“With no explanation of why ,” put in Molino.
Vorpatril glowered at him. “During an alert, a commander does not stop to explain orders. He expects to be instantly obeyed. Besides, the way you people had been champing at the bit, complaining about the delays, I hardly thought I'd need to repeat myself.” A muscle jumped in his jaw; he inhaled and returned to his narrative. “At this point, we suffered something of a communications breakdown.”
Here comes the smokescreen, at last.
“Our understanding was that a two-man security patrol, sent to retrieve an officer who was late reporting in—”
“That would be Ensign Corbeau?”
“Yes. Corbeau. As we understood it at the time, the patrol and the ensign were attacked, disarmed, and detained by quaddies. The real story as it emerged later was more complex, but that was what I had to go on as I was trying to clear Graf Station of all our personnel and stand off for any contingency up to immediate evacuation from local space.”
Miles leaned forward. “Did you believe it to be random quaddies who had seized your men, or did you understand it to have been Graf Station Security?”
Vorpatril didn't quite grind his teeth, but almost. He answered nonetheless, “Yes, we knew it was their security.”
“Did you ask your legal officer to advise you?”
“No.”
“Did Ensign Deslaurier volunteer advice?”
“No, my lord,” Deslaurier managed to whisper.
“I see. Go on.”
“I ordered Captain Brun to send a strike patrol in to retrieve, now, three men from a situation that I believed had just proved lethally dangerous to Barrayaran personnel.”
“Armed with rather more than stunners, I understand?”
“I couldn't ask my men to go up against those numbers with only stunners, my lord,” said Brun. “There are a million of those mutants out there!”
Miles let his brows climb. “On Graf Station? I thought its resident population was around fifty thousand. Civilians.”
Brun made an impatient gesture. “A million to twelve, fifty thousand to twelve—regardless, they needed weapons with authority. My rescue party needed to get in and out as quickly as possible, having to deal with as little argument or resistance as possible. Stunners are useless as weapons of intimidation.”
“I am familiar with the argument.” Miles leaned back and rubbed his lips. “Go on.”
“My patrol reached the place our men were being held—”
“Graf Station Security Post Number Three, was it not?” Miles put in.
“Yes.”
“Tell me—in all the time since the fleet has been here, hadn't any of your men on leave had close encounters with Station Security? No drunk and disorderlies, no safety violations, nothing?”
Brun, looking as though the words were being pulled from his mouth with dental pliers, said, “Three men were arrested by Graf Station Security last week for racing float chairs in an unsafe manner while inebriated.”
“And what happened to them? How did your fleet legal advisor handle it?”
Ensign Deslaurier muttered, “They spent a few hours in lock-up, then I went down and saw that their fines were paid, and pledged to the stationer adjudicator that they would be confined to quarters for the duration of our stay.”
“So you were all by then familiar with standard procedures for retrieving men from contretemps with Station authorities?”
“These were not drunk and disorderlies this time. These were our own security forces carrying out their duties,” said Vorpatril.
“Go on,” sighed Miles. “What happened with your patrol?”
“I still don't have their own firsthand reports, my lord,” said Brun stiffly. “The quaddies have only let one unarmed medical officer visit them in their current place of confinement. Shots were exchanged, both stunner and plasma fire, inside Security Post Three. Quaddies swarmed the place, and our men were overwhelmed and taken prisoner.”
The “swarming” quaddies had included, not unnaturally in Miles's view, most of the Graf Station professional and volunteer fire brigades. Plasma fire. In a civilian space station. Oh, my aching head.
“So,” said Miles gently, “after we shot up the police station and set the habitat on fire, what did we do for an encore?”
Admiral Vorpatril's teeth set, briefly. “I am afraid that, when the Komarran ships in dock failed to obey my urgent orders to cast off and instead allowed themselves to be locked down, I lost the initiative in the situation. Too many hostages had passed into quaddie control by then, the Komarran independent captain-owners were entirely laggard in obeying my position orders, and the quaddies' own militia, such as it is, was allowed to move into position around us. We froze in a standoff for almost two full days. Then we were ordered to stand down and wait your arrival.”
Thank all the gods for that . Military intelligence was as nothing to military stupidity. But to slide halfway to stupid and stop was rare indeed. Vorpatril deserved some credit for that, at least.
Brun put in glumly, “Not much choice at that point. It's not as though we could threaten to blow up the station with our own ships in dock.”
“You couldn't blow up the station in any case,” Miles pointed out mildly. “It would be mass murder. Not to mention a criminal order. The Emperor would have you shot.”
Brun flinched and subsided.
Vorpatril's lips thinned. “T
he Emperor, or you?”
“Gregor and I would flip a coin to see who got to go first.”
A little silence fell.
“Fortunately,” Miles continued, “it appears heads have cooled all round. For that, Admiral Vorpatril, I do thank you. I might add, the fates of your respective careers are a matter between you and your Ops command.” Unless you manage to make me late for the births of my very first children, in which case you'd better start looking for a deep, deep hole. “My job is to talk out as many of the Emperor's subjects from quaddie hands, at the lowest prices, as I can. If I'm really lucky, when I'm done our trade fleets may be able to dock here again someday. You have not given me an especially strong hand of cards to play, here, unfortunately. Nonetheless, I'll see what I can do. I want copies of all raw transcripts pertaining to these late events provided for my review, please.”
“Yes, my lord,” growled Vorpatril. “But,” his voice grew almost anguished, “that still doesn't tell me what happened to Lieutenant Solian!”
“I will undertake to give that question my keenest attention as well, Admiral.” Miles met his eyes. “I promise you.”
Vorpatril nodded shortly.
“But, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan!” Cargomaster Molino put in urgently. “Graf Station authorities are trying to fine our Komarran vessels for the damage done by Barrayaran troops. It must be made plain to them that the military stands alone in this . . . criminal activity.”
Miles hesitated a long moment. “How fortunate for you, Cargomaster,” he said at last, “that in the event of a genuine attack, the reverse would not be true.” He tapped the table and rose to his feet.
CHAPTER THREE
Miles stood on tiptoe to peer through the little port beside the Kestrel 's personnel hatch as the ship maneuvered toward its assigned docking cradle. Graf Station was a vast jumbled aggregation, an apparent chaos of design not surprising in an installation in its third century of expansion. Somewhere buried in the core of the sprawling, bristling structure was a small metallic asteroid, honeycombed for both space and the material used in building this very oldest of the quaddies' many habitats. Also somewhere in its innermost sections could still be seen, according to the guidevids, actual elements from the broken-apart and reconfigured jumpship in which the initial band of hardy quaddie pioneers had made their historic voyage to this refuge.