“Swordfighting,” Kate said. “That kind of fencing.” She grinned at Esmay. “Fooled me, too, the first time I heard it.”
“So anyway, that was fantastic enough, so of course a lot of people didn’t believe it,” Brun said. “They thought maybe our family had done it to get back at Hobart for having my father killed.”
“He did?” Esmay felt she’d somehow missed more than a month or so of time and was being yanked into the future at high speed. “I didn’t hear anything about that—”
“Actually, he didn’t. Not directly. It was one of his hangers-on, who hoped to curry favor with him.”
“Wait—” Esmay held up her hand. “Your father was shot, wasn’t he? Or was he stabbed with a sword, too?”
“Shot, yes. And everyone thought it was the NewTex Militia, only it wasn’t. But Pedar—the man who had it done—gave enough hints to Lady Cecelia—do you know Lady Cecelia?”
Esmay said, “No, but I’ve heard of her. Who is Pedar?”
“An idiot,” Brun said. “A distant relative of Hobart Conselline’s and a pain in the rear. Hobart made him Minister of Foreign Affairs.”
“So—if you know he did it, what have you done about him?”
Brun and Kate exchanged glances. “That’s another of the difficult bits,” Brun said. “My mother killed him—by accident—during a fencing match.”
Esmay took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Your mother killed her husband’s murderer by accident?”
“That’s what the report said,” Brun said. “Mother’s foil broke, leaving a sharp point, and Pedar’s mask failed. Of course, there are people who don’t believe that, either. The timing couldn’t have been worse, from the family’s point of view.”
One failure might be accident . . . two failures made a suspicious coincidence. Esmay said nothing and waited.
“It was an old foil,” Brun went on. “An antique. I don’t know why they were fencing with antiques. Probably Pedar; he was like that. He thought old meant stylish.”
“And then it broke,” Esmay prompted.
“Yes. As near as we can tell, Pedar died several days before Hobart was assassinated—you know how it is with relative time between systems. Lady Cecelia arrived just after it happened.”
Another handy coincidence. Esmay thought of her one glimpse of Lady Thornbuckle, the day Brun had come back to Rockhouse Major . . . the slim, elegant woman who had seemed far too tame a mother for someone like Brun. Maybe not . . .
“So some people blame your family because both this Pedar and the Speaker were killed with swords?”
“It’s more than that,” Brun said. “We’re in the Barraclough Sept, you know, and Hobart was a Conselline.” Esmay didn’t interrupt to explain that she had no idea what a sept was. “There used to be five septs, but now there are just two. All the Families—the Seated Families—have aggregated into these two. They’re rivals economically and politically. The Consellines lost prestige and also profit when the Morrelline mess on Patchcock came out—about the rejuvenation drugs.”
“Rejuvenation drugs?”
“Yes—it was right after the battle at Xavier. I guess you’d have been tied up in legal matters. But—to make a long story short—the Morrelline pharmaceutical plants on Patchcock were making rejuv drugs and using a cut-rate process that produced inferior product. There was a lot of other stuff involved—a Benignity agent, abuse of workers—but it meant that the Morrelline brothers lost control of the family company to their sister Venezia, and profits dropped like a stone. Rejuvenation pharmacology had been their main cash cow, and the reason they had so much influence in the Conselline Sept.”
Esmay’s mind grabbed at the fact relevant to her experience. “Wait—bad rejuvenation drugs? Do you know if any of them were bought for Fleet?”
“As a matter of fact, yes. Apparently Fleet had noticed some problem with rejuvenation of senior NCOs—”
“Yes,” Esmay said. “We certainly did.”
“Hobart wanted market share back; when he became Speaker, he stifled the discussion and research, and started pushing rejuvenation in the open market again. The Benignity claims that’s why they killed him.”
“And in the meantime,” Kate put in, “Brun’s uncle was trying to grab her father’s inheritance, on the grounds that he was not of sound mind, because he sent Fleet to get Brun away from the NewTex Militia.”
“We thought we finally had things under control,” Brun said. “Before the two deaths, we’d found evidence that my uncle had intimidated other family members into giving him their proxy or leaving him their shares. The court upheld my father’s will, and Harlis is under investigation. But now—”
“It’s a mess,” Kate said.
“I can see why,” Esmay said. “And then the mutiny.”
“Yes. The Consellines would probably declare open war on the Barracloughs if they had the military to do it with, but so far the loyalists in Fleet are holding firm.” Kate paused. “The mutineers . . . we hear rumors that some of them have offered their services to various families, including the Consellines.”
“Mercenaries,” Esmay said.
“Yup.” Kate sounded oddly cheerful; Esmay reminded herself that this was not Kate’s home. “Here’s the house.”
Appledale reminded Esmay a little of the big house on the Suiza estancia: large, surrounded by gardens and orchards and outbuildings. Inside, Brun led the way to a room that overlooked a walled garden and swimming pool.
“Now, Esmay, let’s hear your news,” she said, settling into a chintz-covered easy chair.
Esmay made the story as brief as she could: the quarrel with Admiral Serrano, the emergency call announcing the mutiny, her hasty marriage to Barin while in transit to their new assignments, her abrupt dismissal from Fleet.
“That doesn’t sound like her,” Brun said, frowning. “She’s a Serrano, yes—the temper and all that—but I found her fair. She has to know that whatever happened hundreds of years ago isn’t your fault.”
Esmay shrugged. “It’s a matter of honor, she said.”
“Honor,” Brun said, “is highly overrated. At least when it makes people do stupid things.”
“We think a lot of honor on Altiplano,” Esmay said. “And in Fleet.”
Brun waved her hand. “There’s honor and honor. I’m thinking of the stupid kind, like children taking dares. Not that I didn’t—but I wasn’t using my head when I did.”
“Leaving honor out of it,” Kate said, obviously determined to head off an impasse, “why do you think Admiral Serrano changed her mind and kicked you out?”
“Because I was told Admiral Serrano had signed the order,” Esmay said.
Brun shrugged. “There’s lots of admirals Serrano. Maybe it wasn’t Barin’s grandmother after all. I liked her, even if she was a bit scary.”
“A bit—!” Esmay thought of the cold eyes that had been so full of enmity. “But it must have been Vida Serrano . . . who else would do it if she didn’t want it done?”
“Stupidity and confusion,” Kate said. “Happens all the time in big organizations. Someone thought he could make Barin’s grandmother happy by canning you, not knowing that she’d changed her mind. Who else was at this family meeting?”
“I didn’t even get to meet them all,” Esmay said.
“What you need,” Brun said, “is a good lawyer. I can use my influence, but we need help. Kevil Mahoney’s the obvious one. I think he’s still getting his new arm grown in, but if he can’t do it, he still has contacts who can help us. And perhaps we should move into town for a while. I don’t think it’ll be that much harder to secure the town house than Appledale. I’ll call George.”
Kevil Mahoney grinned as Brun and Esmay came in to his room at the rehab center. “I was wondering if that was your cheerful voice I heard coming down the hall,” he said to Brun. “And this is the redoubtable Lt. Suiza, no doubt.”