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Authors: Lois McMaster Bujold

Tags: #Science fiction, #General, #Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Miles (Fictitious character) - Fiction, #Vorkosigan, #Miles (Fictitious character)

BOOK: The warrior's apprentice
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When Miles got there, the pilot officer had stopped breathing. His face was as waxy as his hands, his lips purple-blue as his nails, and the dried blood looked like a smear of colored chalk, dark and opaque.

Frantic haste made Miles’s fingers seem thick and clumsy as he fitted the unit around the mercenary—he refused to think of it as “the mercenary’s body”—and floated him off the floor. Bothari arrived at sickbay as Miles was positioning the mercenary over an examining table and releasing the lift unit.

“What’s the matter with him, Sergeant?” asked Miles urgently.

Bothari glanced over the still form. “He’s dead,” he said flatly, and turned away.

“Not yet, damn it!” cried Miles. “We’ve got to be able to do something to revive him! Stimulants—heart massage—cryo-stasis—did you find the medtech?”

“Yes, but she was too heavily stunned to rouse.”

Miles swore again, and began ransacking drawers for recognizable medications and equipment. They were disorganized, the labels on the outside having, apparently, no relation to the contents.

“It won’t do any good, my lord,” said Bothari, watching him impassively. “You’d need a surgeon. Stroke.”

Miles rocked back on his heels, at last understanding what he had just seen. He pictured the implant wires, ripped through the man’s brain, sliding against the rubbery covering of a major artery, slicing a fine groove in the heart-stressed tubule. Then the weakness propagated with every pulse until catastrophic failure filled the tissues with the killing hemorrhage.

Did this little sickbay even have a cryogenic chamber? Miles hastened around the room and into the next, searching. The freezing process would have to be started immediately, or brain death would be too far advanced to be reversed—never mind that he had only the vaguest idea of how patients were prepared for freezing, or how to operate the device, or...

There it was! A portable, a gleaming metal chamber on a float pallet looking faintly like some deep-sea probe. Miles’s heart seemed to fill his throat. He approached it. Its power pack was empty, its gas canisters read fully discharged, and its control computer was laid open like some crudely dissected biological specimen. Out of order.

Bothari stood at rest, awaiting orders. “Do you require anything further, my lord? I would feel easier if I could supervise the weapons search of the prisoners myself.” He gazed on the corpse with indifferent eyes.

‘Yes—no . . .” Miles walked around the examining table at a distance. His eye was drawn to the dark clot on the pilot officer’s right temple. “What did you do with his implant nexus? “

Bothari looked mildly surprised, and checked his pockets. “I still have it, my lord.”

Miles held out his hand for the crushed silver spider. It weighed no more than the button it resembled, its smooth surface concealing the complexity of the hundreds of kilometers of viral circuitry packed within.

Bothari frowned a little, watching his face. “One casualty is not bad for an operation of this nature, my lord,” he offered. “His life saved many, and not just on our side.”

“Ah,” said Miles, dry and cold. “I’ll keep that in mind, when I come to explain to my father how it was we happened to torture a prisoner to death.”

Bothari flinched. After a silence, he reiterated his interest in the ongoing weapons search, and Miles released him with a tired nod. “I’ll be along shortly.”

Miles puttered nervously around sickbay for a few more minutes, avoiding looking at the examining table. At last, moved by an obscure impulse, he fetched a basin, water, and a cloth, and washed the dried blood from the mercenary’s face.

So this is the terror, he thought, that motivates those crazy massacres of witnesses one reads about. I understand them now. I liked it better when I didn’t.

He drew his dagger and trimmed the trailing wires from the silver button, and pressed it carefully back into place on the pilot officer’s temple. After, until Daum came looking for him with some request for orders, he stood and meditated on the still, waxen features of the thing they’d made. But reason seemed to run backwards, conclusions swallowed in premises, and premises in silence, until in the end only silence and the unanswerable object remained.

 

 

CHAPTER TEN

 

*
      
*
      
*

 

 

Miles gestured the injured mercenary captain ahead of him into sickbay with a little jab of his nerve disruptor. The deadly weapon seemed unnaturally light and easy in his hand. Something that lethal should have more heft, like a broadsword. Wrong, for murder to be so potentially effortless—one ought to at least have to grunt for it.

He would have felt happier with a stunner, but Bothari had insisted that Miles present a front of maximum authority when moving prisoners about. “Saves argument,” he’d said.

The miserable Captain Auson, with two broken arms, nose a swollen blot on his face, did not look very argumentative. But the cat-like tension and calculating flicks of glance of Auson’s first officer, the Betan hermaphrodite Lieutenant Thorne, reconciled Miles to Bothari’s reasoning.

He found Bothari leaning with deceptive casualness against a wall within, and the mercenaries’ frazzledlooking medtech preparing for her next customers. Miles had deliberately saved Auson for last, and toyed with a pleasantly hostile fantasy of ordering the Captain’s arms, when set, immobilized in some anatomically unlikely position.

Thorne was seated to have a cut over one eye sealed, and to receive an injection against stunner-induced migraine. The lieutenant sighed as the medication took effect, and looked at Miles with less squinting curiosity. “Who the hell are you people, anyway?”

Miles arranged his mouth in what he hoped would be taken for a smile of urbane mystery, and said nothing.

“What are you going to do with us?” Thorne persisted.

Good question, he thought. He had returned to Cargo Hold #4 to find their first batch of prisoners well along to having one of the bulkheads apart and escape manufactured. Miles voiced no objection when Bothari prudently had them all stunned again for transport to the Ariel’s brig. There, Miles found, the chief engineer and her assistants had nearly managed to sabotage the magnetic locks in their cells. Miles rather desperately had them all stunned again.

Bothari was right; it was an intrinsically unstable situation. Miles could hardly keep the whole crew stunned for a week or more, crammed in their little prison, without doing them serious physiological damage. Miles’s own people were spread too thinly, manning both ships, guarding the prisoners around the clock—and fatigue would soon multiply error. Bothari’s murderous and final solution had a certain logic to it, Miles supposed. But his eye fell on the silent sheeted form of the mercenary pilot officer in the corner of the room, and he shivered inwardly. Not again. He suppressed jittering panic at his abruptly enlarged troubles, and angled for time.

“It would be a favor to Admiral Oser to put you out now and let you walk home,” he answered Thorne. “Are they all like you out there?”

Thorne said stonily. “The Oserans are a free coalition of mercenaries. Most captains are Captain-owners.”

Miles swore, genuinely surprised. “That’s not a chain of command. That’s a damned committee.”

He stared curiously at Auson. A shot of pain killer was at last unlocking the big man’s attention from his own body, and he glowered back. “Is your crew sworn to you, then, or to Admiral Oser?” Miles asked him.

“Sworn? I hold the contracts of everybody on my ship, if that’s what you mean,” Auson growled. “Ev-

erybody.” He frowned at Thorne, whose nostrils grew pinched.

“My ship,” corrected Miles. Auson’s mouth rippled in a silent snarl and he glared at the nerve disruptor but, as Bothari had predicted, did not argue. The medtech laid the deposed captain’s arm in a brace, and began working over it with a surgical hand tractor. Auson paled, and became more withdrawn. Miles felt a slight twinge of empathy.

“You are, without a doubt, the sorriest excuse for soldiers I have seen in my career,” Miles declaimed, trolling for reactions. One corner of Bothari’s mouth twitched, but Miles ignored that one. “It’s a wonder you’re all still alive. You must choose your foes very carefully.” He rubbed his own still-aching stomach, and shrugged. “Well, I know you do.”

Auson flushed a dull red, and looked away. “Just trying to stir up a little action. We’ve been on this damned blockade duty a frigging year.”

“Stir up action,” Thorne muttered disgustedly. “You would.”

I have you now. The certainty reverberated like a bell in Miles’s mind. His idle dreams of revenge upon the mercenary captain vaporized in the heat of a new and more breathtaking inspiration. His eye nailed Auson, and he rapped out sharply, “How long has it been since your last General Fleet Inspection?”

Auson looked as if it had belatedly occurred to him that he ought to be limiting this conversation to names, ranks, and serial numbers, but Thorne replied, “A year and a half.”

Miles swore, with feeling, and raised his chin aggressively. “I don’t think I can take any more of this. You’re going to have one now.”

Bothari maintained an admirable stillness, against the wall, but Miles could feel his eyes boring through his shoulderblades with his sharpest what-the-hell-areyou-doing-now look. Miles did not turn.

“What the hell,” said Auson, echoing Bothari’s silence, “are you talking about? Who are you? I had you pegged for a smuggler for sure, when you let us shake you down without a squeak, but I’ll swear we didn’t miss—” he surged to his feet, causing Bothari’s disruptor to snap to the aim. His voice edged upward in frustration. “You are a smuggler, damn it! I can’t be that wrong. Was it the ship itself? Who’d want it? What the hell are you smuggling?” he cried plaintively.

Miles smiled coldly. “Military advisors.”

He fancied he could see the hook of his words set in the mercenary captain and his lieutenant. Now to run in the line.

Miles began inspection, with some relish, in the sickbay itself, since he was fairly sure of his ground there. At disruptor point, the medtech produced her official inventory and began turning out drawers under Miles’s intent eye. With a sure instinct Miles focused first on drugs capable of abuse, and immediately turned up some nicely embarrassing discrepancies.

Next was equipment. Miles itched to get to the cryogenic chamber, but his sense of showmanship held it for last. There were enough other breakdowns. Some of his grandfather’s more acerbic turns of phrase, suitably edited, had turned the medtech’s face to chalk by the time they arrived at the piece de resistance.

“And just how long has this chamber been out of commission, Medtech?”

“Six months,” she muttered. “The repairs engineer kept saying he’d get to it,” she added defensively at Miles’s frown and raised eyebrows.

“And you never thought to stir him up? Or more properly, ask your superior officers to do so?”

“It seemed like there was plenty of time. We haven’t used—”

“And in that six months your captain never once even ran an in-house inspection?”

“No, sir.”

Miles swept Auson and Thorne with a gaze like a dash of cold water, then let his eye deliberately linger on the covered form of the dead man. “Time ran out for your pilot officer.”

“How did he die?” asked Thorne, sharply, like a sword thrust.

Miles parried with a deliberate misunderstanding. “Bravely. Like a soldier.” Horribly, like an animal sacrifice, his thought corrected. Imperative they don’t figure that out. But, “I’m sorry,” he added impulsively. “He deserved better.”

The medtech was looking at Thorne, stricken. Thorne said gently, “The cryo chamber wouldn’t have done much good for a disruptor blast to the head anyway, Cela.”

“But the next casualty,” Miles interposed, “might be some other injury.” Excellent, that the excessively observant lieutenant had evolved a personal theory as to how the pilot officer happened to be dead without a mark on him. Miles was vastly relieved, not least because it freed him of having to dishonorably burden the medtech with a guilt not rightfully hers.

“I will send you the engineering technician later today,” Miles went on. “I want every piece of equipment in here operating properly by tomorrow. In the meantime you can start putting this place in an order more like a military sickbay and less like a broom closet, is that understood, Medtech?” He dropped his voice to a whisper, like the hiss of a whip.

The medtech braced to attention, and cried, “Yes, sir!” Auson was flushed; Thorne’s lips were parted in an expression very like appreciation. They left her pulling out drawers with trembling hands.

Miles motioned the two mercenaries ahead of him down the corridor, and fell behind for an urgent whispered conference with Bothari.

“You going to leave her unguarded?” Bothari muttered disapprovingly. “Madness.”

“She’s too busy to bolt. With luck, I may even be able to keep her too busy to run an autopsy on that Pilot Officer. Quick, Sergeant! If I want to fake a General Fleet Inspection, where’s the best place to dig up dirt?”

“On this ship? Anywhere.”

“No, really! The next stop has got to look bad. I can’t fake the technical stuff, have to wait till Baz is ready for a break.”

“In that case, try crew’s quarters,” suggested Bothari. “But why?”

“I want those two to figure we’re some sort of mercenary super-outfit. I’ve got an idea how to keep them from combining to retake their ship.”

“They’ll never buy it.”

“They will buy it. They’ll love it. They’ll eat it up. Don’t you see, it saves their pride. We beat them—for now. Which do you think they’d rather believe, that we’re great, or that they’re a bunch of screw-ups?”

“Isn’t it plain?”

“Just watch!” He skipped a silent dance step, composed his face to a mass of sternness, and strode after his prisoners, his boots ringing like iron down the corridor.

The crew’s quarters were, from Miles’s point of view, a delight. Bothari did the disassembling. His instinct for turning up evidence of slovenly habits and concealed vices was uncanny. Miles supposed he’d seen it all, in his time. When Bothari uncovered the expected bottles of the ethanol addict, Auson and Thorne took it as a matter of course; evidently the man was a known and tolerated borderline functional. The two kavaweed dopers, however, seemed to be a surprise to all. Miles promptly confiscated the lot. He left another soldier’s remarkable collection of sexual aids in situ, however, merely inquiring of Auson, with a quirk of an eyebrow, if he were running a cruiser or a cruise ship? Auson fumed, but said nothing. Miles cordially hoped the captain might spend the rest of the day thinking up scathing retorts, too late to use.

Miles studied Auson’s and Thorne’s own chambers intently, for clues to their owners’ personalities. Thorne’s, interestingly, came closest to passing inspection. Auson appeared to brace himself for a rampage when they came at last to his own cabin. Miles smiled silkily, and had Bothari put everything away, after inspection, in better order than he’d found it. It was all those years as an officer’s batman, perhaps; when they were done the room appeared quite transformed. From the evidence, or lack thereof, Auson himself appeared to have no

serious vices beyond a natural indolence exacerbated by boredom into laziness.

The collection of exotic personal weapons picked up during this tour made an impressive pile. Miles had Bothari examine and test each one. He made an elaborate show of noting each substandard item and checking it off against a list of the owners. Exhilarated and inspired, he waxed wonderfully sarcastic; the mercenaries squirmed.

They inspected the arsenal. Miles took a plasma arc from a dusty rack, closing his hand over the control readouts on the grip.

“Do you store your weapons charged or uncharged?”

“Uncharged,” muttered Auson, craning his neck slightly.

Miles raised his eyebrows and swung the weapon to point at the mercenary captain, finger tightening on the trigger. Auson went white. At the last instant, Miles flicked his wrist slightly to the left, and sent a bolt of energy sizzling past Auson’s ear. The big man recoiled as a molten backsplash of plastic and metal sprayed from the wall behind him.

“Uncharged?” sang Miles. “I see. A wise policy, I’m sure.”

Both officers flinched. As they exited, Miles heard Thorne mutter, “Told you so.” Auson growled wordlessly.

Miles braced Baz privately before they began in engineering.

“You are now,” he told him, “Commander Bazil Jesek of the Dendarii Mercenaries, Chief Engineer. You’re rough and tough and you eat slovenly engineering technicians for breakfast, and you’re appalled at what they’ve done to this nice ship.”

“It’s actually not too bad, near as I can tell,” said Baz. “Better than I could do with such an advanced set of systems. But how am I going to make an inspection when they know more than I do? They’ll spot me right away!”

“No, they won’t. Remember, you’re asking the questions, they re answering them. Say ‘hm,’ and frown a lot. Don’t let it start going the other way. Look—didn’t you ever have an engineering commander who was a real son-of-a-bitch, that everybody hated—but who was always right?”

Baz looked confusedly reminiscent. “There was Lieutenant Commander Tarski. We used to sit around thinking up ways to poison him. Most of them weren’t very practical.”

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