Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction (471 page)

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Authors: Leigh Grossman

Tags: #science fiction, #literature, #survey, #short stories, #anthology

BOOK: Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction
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He took turns with Pym, hacking their way through with their Service bush knives. The roses were vigorous and studded with thick thorns, and hacked back with a vicious elastic recoil. Fat Ninny did his part by swinging his big head back and forth and nipping off blooms and chomping them down happily. Miles wasn’t sure just how many he ought to let the big roan eat—just because the species wasn’t native to Barrayar didn’t mean it wasn’t poisonous to horses. Miles sucked at his wounds and reflected upon Barrayar’s shattered ecological history.

The fifty thousand Firsters from Earth had only meant to be the spearhead of Barrayar’s colonization. Then, by a gravitational anomaly, the wormhole jump through which the colonists had come had shifted closed—violently, irrevocably, and without warning. The terraforming which had begun, so careful and controlled in the beginning, collapsed along with everything else. Imported Earth plant and animal species had escaped everywhere to run wild, as the humans turned their attention to the most urgent problems of survival. Biologists still mourned the mass extinctions of native species that had followed, the erosions and droughts and floods, but really, Miles thought, over the centuries of the Time of Isolation the fittest of both worlds had fought it out to a perfectly good new balance. If it was alive and covered the ground who cared where it came from?

We are all here by accident. Like the roses.

* * * *

T
hey camped that night high in the hills, and pushed on in the morning to the flanks of the true mountains. They were now out of the region Miles was personally familiar with from his childhood, and he checked Harra’s directions frequently on his orbital survey map. They stopped only a few hours short of their goal at sunset of the second day. Harra insisted she could lead them on in the dusk from here, but Miles did not care to arrive after nightfall, unannounced, in a strange place of uncertain welcome.

He bathed the next morning in a stream, and unpacked and dressed carefully in his new officer’s Imperial dress greens. Pym wore the Vorkosigan brown-and-silver livery, and pulled the Count’s standard on a telescoping aluminum pole from the recesses of his saddlebag and mounted it on his left stirrup.
Dressed to kill,
thought Miles joylessly. Dr. Dea wore ordinary black fatigues and looked uncomfortable. If they constituted a message, Miles was damned if he knew what it was.

They pulled the horses up at midmorning before a two-room cabin set on the edge of a vast grove of sugar maples, planted who-knew-how-many centuries ago but now raggedly marching up the vale by self-seeding. The mountain air was cool and pure and bright. A few chickens stalked and bobbed in the weeds. An algae-choked wooden pipe from the woods dribbled water into a trough, which overflowed into a squishy green streamlet and away.

Harra slid down and smoothed her skirt and climbed the porch. “Karal?” she called. Miles waited high on horseback for the initial contact. Never give up a psychological advantage.

“Harra? Is that you?” came a man’s voice from within. He banged open the door and rushed out. “Where have you been, girl? We’ve been beating the bushes for you! Thought you’d broke your neck in the scrub somewhere—” He stopped short before the three silent men on horseback.

“You wouldn’t write down my charges, Karal,” said Harra rather breathlessly. Her hands kneaded her skirt. “So I walked to the district magistrate at Vorkosigan Surleau to Speak them myself.”

“Oh, girl,” Karal breathed in regret, “that was a
stupid
thing to do.…” His head lowered and swayed, as he stared uneasily at the riders. He was a balding man of maybe sixty, leathery and worn, and his left arm ended in a stump. Another veteran.

“Speaker Serg Karal?” began Miles sternly. “I am the Voice of Count Vorkosigan. I am charged to investigate the crime Spoken by Harra Csurik before the Count’s Court, namely the murder of her infant daughter Raina. As Speaker of Silvy Vale, you are requested and required to assist me in all matters pertaining to the Count’s justice.”

At this point Miles ran out of prescribed formalities, and was on his own. That hadn’t taken long. He waited. Fat Ninny snuffled. The silver-on-brown cloth of the standard made a few soft snapping sounds, lifted by a vagrant breeze.

“The district magistrate wasn’t there,” put in Harra, “but the Count was.”

Karal was gray-faced, staring. He pulled himself together with an effort, came to a species of attention, and essayed a creaking half-bow. “Who—who are you, sir?”

“Lord Miles Vorkosigan.”

Karal’s lips moved silently. Miles was no lip reader, but he was pretty sure it came to a dismayed variant of
Oh, shit.
“This is my liveried man, Armsman Pym, and my medical examiner, Lieutenant Dea of the Imperial Service.”

“You are my lord Count’s son?” Karal croaked.

“The one and only.” Miles was suddenly sick of the posing. Surely that was a sufficient first impression. He swung down off Ninny, landing lightly on the balls of his feet. Karal’s gaze followed him down, and down.
Yeah, so I’m short. But wait’ll you see me dance.
“All right if we water our horses in your trough here?” Miles looped Ninny’s reins through his arm and stepped toward it.

“Uh, that’s for the people, m’lord,” said Karal. “Just a minute and I’ll fetch a bucket.” He hitched up his baggy trousers and trotted off around the side of the cabin. A minute’s uncomfortable silence, then Karal’s voice floating faintly, “Where’d you put the goat bucket, Zed?”

Another voice, light and young. “Behind the woodstack, Da.” The voices fell to a muffled undertone. Karal came trotting back with a battered aluminum bucket, which he placed beside the trough. He knocked out a wooden plug in the side, letting a bright stream arc out to splash and fill. Fat Ninny flickered his ears and snuffled and rubbed his big head against Miles, smearing his tunic with red and white horsehairs and nearly knocking him off his feet. Karal glanced up and smiled at the horse, though his smile fell away as his gaze passed on to the horse’s owner. As Fat Ninny gulped his drink Miles caught a glimpse of the source of the second voice, a boy of around twelve who flitted off into the woods behind the cabin.

Karal fell to, assisting Miles and Harra and Pym in securing the horses. Miles left Pym to unsaddle and feed, and followed Karal into his house. Harra stuck to Miles like glue. Dr. Dea unpacked his medical kit and trailed along. Miles’s boots rang loud and unevenly on the wooden floorboards.

“My wife, she’ll be back in the nooning,” said Karal, moving uncertainly around the room as Miles and Dea settled themselves on a bench and Harra curled up with her arms around her knees on the floor beside the fieldstone hearth. “I’ll…I’ll make some tea, m’lord.” He skittered back out the door to fill a kettle at the trough before Miles could say,
No, thank you. No, let him ease his nerves in ordinary movements. Then maybe Miles could begin to tease out how much of this static was social nervousness and how much was—perhaps—guilty conscience. By the time Karal had the kettle on the coals he was noticeably better controlled, so Miles began.

“I’d prefer to commence this investigation immediately, Speaker. It need not take long.”

“It need not…take place at all, m’lord. The baby’s death was natural—there were no marks on her. She was weakly, she had the cat’s mouth, who knows what else was wrong with her? She died in her sleep, or by some accident.”

“It is remarkable,” said Miles dryly, “how often such accidents happen in this district. My father the Count himself has…remarked on it.”

“There was no call to drag you up here.” Karal looked in exasperation at Harra. She sat silent, unmoved by his persuasion.

“It was no problem,” said Miles blandly.

“Truly, m’lord”—Karal lowered his voice—“I believe the child might have been overlain. ’S no wonder, in her grief, that her mind rejected it. Lem Csurik, he’s a good boy, a good provider. She really doesn’t want to do this, her reason is just temporarily overset by her troubles.”

Harra’s eyes, looking out from her hair-thatch, were poisonously cold.

“I begin to see.” Miles’s voice was mild, encouraging.

Karal brightened slightly. “It all could still be all right. If she will just be patient. Get over her sorrow. Talk to poor Lem. I’m sure he didn’t kill the babe. Not rush to something she’ll regret.”

“I begin to see”—Miles let his tone go ice cool—“why Harra Csurik found it necessary to walk four days to get an unbiased hearing. ‘You think.’ ‘You believe.’ ‘Who knows what?’ Not you, it appears. I hear speculation—accusation—innuendo—assertion
.
I came for
facts,
Speaker Karal. The Count’s justice doesn’t turn on guesses. It doesn’t have to. This isn’t the Time of Isolation. Not even in the back-beyond.

“My investigation of the facts will begin now. No judgment will be—rushed into, before the facts are complete. Confirmation of Lem Csurik’s guilt or innocence will come from his own mouth, under fast-penta, administered by Dr. Dea before two witnesses—yourself and a deputy of your choice. Simple, clean, and quick.”
And maybe I can be on my way out of this benighted hole before sundown.
“I require you, Speaker, to go now and bring Lem Csurik for questioning. Armsman Pym will assist you.”

Karal killed another moment pouring the boiling water into a big brown pot before speaking. “I’m a travelled man, lord. A twenty-year Service man. But most folks here have never been out of Silvy Vale. Interrogation chemistry might as well be magic to them. They might say it was a false confession, got that way.”

“Then you and your deputy can say otherwise. This isn’t exactly like the good old days, when confessions were extracted under torture, Karal. Besides, if he’s as innocent as you guess—he’ll clear himself, no?”

Reluctantly, Keral went into the adjoining room. He came back shrugging on a faded Imperial Service uniform jacket with a corporal’s rank marked on the collar, the buttons of which did not quite meet across his middle anymore. Preserved, evidently, for such official functions. Even as in Barrayaran custom one saluted the uniform, and not the man in it, so might the wrath engendered by an unpopular duty fall on the office and not the individual who carried it out. Miles appreciated the nuance.

Karal paused at the door. Harra still sat wrapped in silence by the hearth, rocking slightly.

“M’lord,” said Karal. “I’ve been Speaker of Silvy Vale for sixteen years now. In all that time nobody has had to go to the district magistrate for a Speaking, not for water rights or stolen animals or swiving or even the time Neva accused Bors of tree piracy over the maple sap. We’ve not had a blood feud in all that time.”

“I have no intention of starting a blood feud, Karal. I just want the facts.”

“That’s the thing, m’lord. I’m not so in love with facts as I used to be. Sometimes, they bite.” Karal’s eyes were urgent.

Really, the man was doing everything but stand on his head and juggle cats—one-handed—to divert Miles. How overt was his obstruction likely to get?

“Silvy Vale cannot be permitted to have its own little Time of Isolation,” said Miles in warning. “The Count’s justice is for everyone, now. Even if they’re small. And weakly. And have something wrong with them. And cannot even speak for themselves—
Speaker.

Karal flinched, white about the lips—point taken, evidently. He trudged away up the trail, Pym following watchfully, one hand loosening the stunner in his holster.

They drank the tea while they waited, and Miles pottered about the cabin, looking but not touching. The hearth was the sole source of heat for cooking and washwater. There was a beaten metal sink for washing up, filled by hand from a covered bucket but emptied through a drainpipe under the porch to join the streamlet running down out of the trough. The second room was a bedroom, with a double bed and chests for storage. A loft held three more pallets; the boy around back had brothers, apparently. The place was cramped, but swept, things put away and hung up.

On a side table sat a government-issue audio receiver, and a second and older military model, opened up, apparently in the process of getting minor repairs and a new power pack. Exploration revealed a drawer full of old parts, nothing more complex than for simple audio sets, unfortunately. Speaker Karal must double as Silvy Vale’s comlink specialist. How appropriate. They must pick up broadcasts from the station in Hassadar, maybe the high-power government channels from the capital as well.

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