Shards of Honor (Vorkosigan Saga)

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Shards of Honor (Vorkosigan Saga) Page 18

by Lois McMaster Bujold


  “We can’t possibly make it in under a week! Not even in the courier!”

  “You’ll make it in five days, boosting six points past emergency max the whole way. If the engineer’s been doing his job, the engines won’t blow until you hit eight. Quite safe.” He glanced over his shoulder. “Couer, scramble the courier crew, please. And get their captain on the line, I want to give him his orders personally.”

  Commodore Couer’s eyebrows rose, but he moved to obey.

  The surgeon lowered his voice, glancing at Cordelia. “Is this Betan sentimentality at work, sir? A little odd in the Emperor’s service, don’t you think?”

  Vorkosigan smiled, narrow-eyed, and matched his tone. “Betan insubordination, Doctor? You will oblige me by directing your energies to carrying out your orders instead of evolving excuses why you can’t.”

  “Hell of a lot easier just to open the stopcocks. And what are you going to do with them once they’re—completed, born, whatever you call it? Who’s going to take responsibility for them then? I can sympathize with your wish to impress your girlfriend, but think ahead, sir!”

  Vorkosigan’s eyebrows snapped together, and he growled, down in his throat. The surgeon recoiled. Vorkosigan buried the growl in a throat-clearing noise, and took a breath.

  “That will be my problem. My word. Your responsibility will end there. Twenty-five minutes, Doctor. If you’re on time I may let you ride up on the inside of the shuttle.” He grinned a small white grin, eloquently aggressive. “You can have three days home leave after they’re in place at ImpMil, if you wish.”

  The surgeon shrugged wry defeat, and vanished to collect his things.

  Cordelia looked after him in doubt. “Will he be all right?”

  “Oh, yes, it just takes him a while to turn his thinking around. By the time they get to Vorbarr Sultana, he’ll be acting like he invented the project, and the—uterine replicators.” Vorkosigan’s gaze returned to the float pallet. “Those are the damnedest things… .”

  A guard entered. “Pardon me, sir, but the Escobaran shuttle pilot is asking for Captain Naismith. They’re ready to lift.”

  Couer spoke from the communications monitor. “Sir, I have the courier captain on line.”

  Cordelia gave Vorkosigan a look of helpless frustration, acknowledged by a small shake of his head, and each turned wordlessly to the demands of duty. She left meditating on the doctor’s parting shot. And we thought we were being so careful. We really must do something about our eyes.

  Chapter Twelve

  She traveled home with about two hundred others, mostly Escobarans, on a Tau Cetan passenger liner hastily converted for the purpose. There was a lot of time spent exchanging stories and sharing memories among the ex-prisoners, sessions subtly guided, she realized shortly, by the heavy sprinkling of psych officers the Escobarans had sent with the ship. After a while her silence about her own experiences began to stand out, and she learned to spot the casual-looking roundup techniques for the only-apparently-impromptu group therapy, and make herself scarce.

  It wasn’t enough. She found herself quietly but implacably pursued by a bright-faced young woman named Irene, whom she deduced must be assigned to her case. She popped up at meals, in the corridors, in the lounges, always with a novel excuse for starting a conversation. Cordelia avoided her when she could, and turned the conversation deftly, or sometimes bluntly, to other topics when she couldn’t.

  After another week the girl disappeared back into the mob, but Cordelia returned to her cabin one day to discover her roommate gone and replaced by another, a steady-eyed, easygoing older woman in civilian dress who was not one of the ex-prisoners. Cordelia lay on her bed glumly and watched her unpacking.

  “Hi, I’m Joan Sprague,” the woman introduced herself sunnily.

  Time to get explicit. “Good afternoon, Dr. Sprague. I am correct, I think, in identifying you as Irene’s boss?”

  Sprague paused. “You’re quite right. But I prefer to keep things on a casual basis.”

  “No, you don’t. You prefer to keep things looking like they’re on a casual basis. I appreciate the difference.”

  “You are a very interesting person, Captain Naismith.”

  “Yes, well, there’s more of you than there are of me. Suppose I agree to talk to you. Will you call off the rest of your dogs?”

  “I’m here for you to talk to—but when you are ready.”

  “So, ask me what you want to know. Let’s get this over with, so we can both relax.” I could use a little therapy, at that, Cordelia thought wistfully. I feel so lousy… .

  Sprague seated herself on the bed, a mild smile on her face and the utmost attention in her eyes. “I want to try and help you remember what happened during the time you were a prisoner aboard the Barrayaran flagship. Getting it into your consciousness, however horrible it was, is your first step to healing.”

  “Um, I think we may be at cross-purposes. I remember everything that happened during that time with the utmost clarity. I have no trouble getting it into my consciousness. What I would like is to get it out, at least long enough to sleep now and then.”

  “I see. Go on. Why don’t you describe what happened?”

  Cordelia gave an account of events, from the time of the wormhole jump from Beta Colony until after the murder of Vorrutyer, but ended it before Vorkosigan’s entrance, saying vaguely, “I moved around to different hiding places on the ship for a couple of days, but they caught me in the end and put me back in the brig.”

  “So. You don’t remember being tortured or raped by Admiral Vorrutyer, and you don’t remember killing him.”

  “I wasn’t. And I didn’t. I thought I made that clear.”

  The doctor shook her head sorrowfully. “It’s reported you were taken away from camp twice by the Barrayarans. Do you remember what happened during those times?”

  “Yes, of course.”

  “Can you describe it?”

  She balked. “No.” The secret of the Prince’s assassination would be nothing to the Escobarans—they could hardly dislike the Barrayarans any more than they did already—but the mere rumor of the truth could be devastating to civil order on Barrayar. Riots, military mutiny, the downfall of Vorkosigan’s emperor—those were just the beginnings of the possible consequences. If there was a civil war on Barrayar, could Vorkosigan be killed in it? God, please, thought Cordelia wearily, no more death …

  Sprague looked tremendously interested. Cordelia felt pounced on. She amended herself. “There was an officer of mine, who was killed during the Betan survey of that planet—you know about that, I hope?” The doctor nodded. “They made arrangements to put a marker on his grave, at my request. That’s all.”

  “I understand,” Sprague sighed. “We had another case like yours. The girl had also been raped by Vorrutyer, or some of his men, and had it covered up by the Barrayaran medical people. I suppose they were trying to protect his reputation.”

  “Oh, I believe I met her, aboard the flagship. She was in my shelter, too, right?”

  Sprague’s surprised look confirmed it, although she made a little vague gesture indicating professional confidence.

  “You’re right about her,” Cordelia went on. “I’m glad she’s getting what she needs. But you’re wrong about me. You’re wrong about Vorrutyer’s reputation, too. The whole reason they put out this stupid story about me was because they thought it would look worse for him to be killed by a weak woman than by one of his own combat soldiers.”

  “The physical evidence from your medical examination alone is enough to make me question that,” said Sprague.

  “What physical evidence?” asked Cordelia, momentarily bewildered.

  “The evidence of torture,” the doctor replied, looking grim, even a little angry. Not angry at her, Cordelia realized.

  “What? I was never tortured!”

  “Yes. An excellent cover-up. Outrageous—but they couldn’t hide the physical traces. Are you aware that you had a br
oken arm, two broken ribs, numerous contusions on your neck, head, hands, arms—your whole body, in fact? And your biochemistry—evidence of extreme stress, sensory deprivation, considerable weight loss, sleep disorders, adrenal excess—shall I go on?”

  “Oh,” said Cordelia. “That.”

  “Oh, that?” echoed the doctor, raising an eyebrow.

  “I can explain that,” said Cordelia eagerly. She laughed a little. “In a way, I suppose I can blame it on you Escobarans. I was in a cell on the flagship during the retreat. It took a hit—shook everything around like gravel in a can, including me. That’s where I got the broken bones and so on.”

  The doctor made a note. “Very good. Very good indeed. Subtle. But not subtle enough—your bones were broken on two different occasions.”

  “Oh,” said Cordelia. And how was she going to explain Bothari, without mentioning Vorkosigan’s cabin? A friend tried to strangle me… .

  “I would like you to think,” said Dr. Sprague carefully, “about the possibility of drug therapy. The Barrayarans have done an excellent cover-up on you, even better than the other, and it took very deep probing indeed for her. I think it’s going to be even more necessary in your case. But we must have your voluntary cooperation.”

  “Thank God for that.” Cordelia lay back on her bed and pulled her pillow over her face, thinking of drug therapy. It made her blood run cold. She wondered how long she could take deep probing for memories that weren’t there before she started manufacturing them to meet the demand. And worse: the very first effect of probing must be to bring up those secret agonies that were uppermost on her mind—Vorkosigan’s secret wounds… . She sighed, removed the pillow from her head and hugged it to her chest, and looked up to find Sprague regarding her with deep concern. “You still here?”

  “I’ll always be here, Cordelia.”

  “That’s—what I was afraid of.”

  Sprague got no more from her after that. She was afraid to sleep, now, for fear of talking or even being questioned in her sleep. She took little catnaps, waking with a start whenever there was movement in the cabin, such as her roommate getting up to go to the bathroom in the night. Cordelia did not admire Ezar Vorbarra’s secret purposes in the late war, but at least they had been accomplished. The thought of all that pain and death being made vain as smoke haunted her, and she resolved that all Vorkosigan’s soldiers, yes, even Vorrutyer and the camp commandant, would not be made to have died for nothing through her.

  She ended the trip far more frayed than she had begun it, floating on the edge of real breakdown, plagued by pounding headaches, insomnia, a mysterious left-hand tremula, and the beginnings of a stutter.

  *

  The trip from Escobar to Beta Colony was much easier. It only took four days, in a Betan fast courier sent, she was surprised to find, especially for her. She viewed the news reports on her cabin holovid. She was deathly tired of the war, but she caught by chance a mention of Vorkosigan’s name, and could not resist following it up to find out what the public view of his part was.

  Horrified, she discovered that his work with the Judiciary’s investigative commission led the Betan and Escobaran press to blame him for the way the prisoners had been treated, as if he had been in charge of them from the beginning. The old false Komarr story was dragged out on parade, and his name was reviled everywhere. The injustice of it all made her furious, and she gave up the news in disgust.

  At last they orbited Beta Colony, and she haunted Nav and Com for a glimpse of home.

  “There’s the old sandbox at last.” The captain cheerfully keyed her a view. “They’re sending a shuttle up for you, but there’s a storm over the capital, and it’s a bit delayed, till it subsides enough for them to drop screens at the port.”

  “I may as well wait till I get down to call my mom,” Cordelia commented. “She’s probably at work now. No point bothering her there. Hospital’s not far from the shuttleport. I can get a nice relaxing drink while I wait for her to get off shift and pick me up.”

  The captain gave her a peculiar look. “Uh, yeah.”

  The shuttle arrived eventually. Cordelia shook hands all around, thanking the courier crew for the ride, and went aboard. The shuttle stewardess greeted her with a pile of new clothes.

  “What’s all this? By heavens, the Expeditionary Force uniforms at last! Better late than never, I guess.”

  “Why don’t you go ahead and put them on,” urged the stewardess, smiling extraordinarily.

  “Why not.” She had been wearing the same borrowed Escobaran uniform for quite some time now, and was thoroughly tired of it. She took the sky blue cloth and the shiny black boots, amused. “Why jackboots, in God’s name? There’s scarcely a horse on Beta Colony, except in the zoos. I admit, they do look wicked.”

  Finding she was the sole passenger on the shuttle, she changed on the spot. The stewardess had to help her with the boots.

  “Whoever designed these should be forced to wear them to bed,” Cordelia muttered. “Or perhaps he does.”

  The shuttle descended, and she went to the window, eager for the first look at her hometown. The ochre haze parted at last, and they spiraled neatly down to the shuttleport and taxied to the docking bay.

  “Seems to be a lot of people out there today.”

  “Yes, the president’s going to make a speech,” said the stewardess. “It’s very exciting. Even if I didn’t vote for him.”

  “Steady Freddy got that many people to show up for one of his speeches? Just as well. I can blend with the crowd. This thing is a bit bright. I think I’d rather be invisible, today.”

  She could feel the letdown beginning, and wondered how far down it would end. The Escobaran doctor had been right in her principles, if not in her facts; there was an emotional debt yet to be paid, knotted somewhere under her stomach.

  The shuttle’s engines whined to silence, and she rose to thank the grinning stewardess, uneasy. “There’s not going to be a r-reception committee out there for me, is there? I really don’t think I could handle it today.”

  “You’ll have some help,” the stewardess assured her. “Here he comes now.”

  A man in a civilian sarong entered the shuttle, smiling broadly. “How do you do, Captain Naismith,” he introduced himself. “I’m Philip Gould, the president’s press secretary.” Cordelia was shocked. Press Secretary was a cabinet-level post. “It’s an honor to meet you.”

  She was tumbling fast. “You’re not p-planning some kind of, of d-dog and pony show out there, are you? I r-really just want to go home.”

  “Well, the president is planning a speech. And he has a little something for you,” he said soothingly. “In fact, he was hoping he might make several speeches with you, but we can discuss that later. Now, we hardly expect the Heroine of Escobar to suffer from stage fright, but we have prepared some remarks for you. I’ll be with you all the time, and help you with the cues, and the press.” He passed her a hand viewer. “Do try and look surprised, when you first step out of the shuttle.”

  “I am surprised.” She scanned the script rapidly. “Th-this is a p-pack of lies!”

  He looked worried. “Have you always had that little speech impediment?” he asked cautiously.

  “N-no, it’s my souvenir from the Escobaran psych service, and the l-late war. Who came up with this g-garbage, anyway?” The line that particularly caught her eye referred to “the cowardly Admiral Vorkosigan and his pack of ruffians.” “Vorkosigan’s the bravest man I ever met.”

  Gould took her firmly by the upper arm, and guided her to the shuttle hatch. “We have to go, now, to make the holovid timing. Maybe you can just leave that line out, all right? Now, smile.”

  “I want to see my mother.”

  “She’s with the president. Here we go.”

  They exited the tube from the shuttle hatch into a milling mob of men, women, and equipment. They all began shouting questions at once. Cordelia began to shake, all over, in waves that began in the pit of
her stomach and radiated outward. “I don’t know any of these people,” she hissed to Gould.

  “Keep walking,” he hissed back through a fixed smile. They mounted a reviewing stand set up on the balcony overlooking the shuttleport concourse. The concourse was packed solidly with a colorful crowd in a holiday mood. They blurred before Cordelia’s eyes. She saw a familiar face at last, her mother, smiling and crying, and she fell into her arms, to the delight of the press who recorded it copiously.

  “Get me out of this as fast as you can,” she whispered fiercely into her mother’s ear. “I’m about to lose it.”

  Her mother held her at arm’s length, not understanding, still smiling. Her place was taken by Cordelia’s brother, his family clustered nervously and proudly behind him, looking at her, she felt, with eyes that devoured her.

  She spotted her crew, also dressed in the new uniforms, standing with some government officials. Parnell gave her a thumbs-up, grinning dementedly. She was bundled over to stand behind a rostrum with the president of Beta Colony.

  Steady Freddy seemed larger than life to her confused eyes, big and booming. Perhaps that was why he projected over the holovid so well. He grasped her hand and held it up in his, to the cheers of the crowd. It made her feel like an idiot.

  The president gave a fine performance with his speech, not even using the prompter. It was full of the jingoistic patriotism that had so intoxicated the place when she’d left, and not one word in a dozen touched the real truth even from the Betan point of view. He worked up gradually and with perfect showmanship to the medal. Cordelia’s heart began to pound lumpishly as she caught the drift of it. She tried desperately to evade the knowledge, turning to the press secretary.

  “Is this on behalf of m-my crew, for the plasma mirrors?”

  “They have theirs already.” Was he ever going to stop smiling? “This is your very own.”

 

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