“Hmm. And Fleet could do nothing.”
“I wouldn’t say nothing, but in the present crisis, they can’t afford to keep a force in the Sirialis system for any length of time. They’re quite reasonably concerned about mutineers attacking more populated worlds, a major shipping nexus—even here, at Castle Rock—or hopping the border to the Benignity, or the Bloodhorde.”
“You did remind them Sirialis is only one jump away from the Bloodhorde, I hope?”
“They knew that already. I think they’re watching the jump point.”
“Makes sense, I suppose.” Stepan sighed. “I didn’t get there as often as I liked, but it was a beautiful place, and your mother’s hand made it better. Speaking of your mother, do you know where she and Lady Cecelia were going?”
“I have no idea,” Brun said. “By the time I found out, they were already gone, and I haven’t heard anything.”
“Brun, my dear—I know you loved both your parents dearly, and you’ve already lost one to violence. Have you considered that they might be lost in this turmoil, Miranda and Cecelia?”
“Of course . . . but it doesn’t do any good to think about it.”
“Perhaps not, but to be prepared for bad news, if it comes, that can be important.” Stepan watched her steadily.
“What—have you heard something?” Brun felt her heart contract.
“Not directly, no. But I do know something’s caused a flurry in Defense. I don’t know if it’s just a space battle somewhere—and that’s a terrible thing to say, I’m sorry—or if it could involve your mother. The Consellines have been badgering Fleet to take time to look for her; that’s why I thought I should prepare you.”
“Thank you,” Brun said. She had thought she was prepared, but now that she let herself really think about it, her face felt stiff, her mouth dry. Her mother dead? Lady Cecelia? On top of everything else—it was like a vast weight of sand landing on her, squeezing her . . .
“It may not be anything,” Stepan said.
Brun forced her mind back to the practical. “I presume we’ll find out,” she said. “Thanks for the warning.”
“If there is bad news, and if it is too much for you, let me know at once; we can do something else this Council meeting—”
“Not really,” Brun said. “You’ve already explained the problems, and why my speaking will give us the best leverage we have. I’ll do it.”
Stepan’s warning could not entirely prepare her for the news, she found, when the message came from Grand Admiral Savanche the afternoon before the next Grand Council session. She and her mother had never been close until after her father’s death; she had always felt reproved by her mother’s cool composure. And now—there was no more time. Her mother was dead. Had been dead days, or weeks . . . she couldn’t concentrate on the time adjustments.
She took a long breath, as she folded a scarf into the neckline of her suit. She could not cry now. She could not afford to be red-eyed and puffy-faced for this. She took more slow deep breaths, watching herself in the mirror, watching the outward signs of inward turmoil fade, until it was almost her mother’s serenity that looked back at her.
Another pang: had this been how Miranda did it? Had she hidden, beneath that serenity, such anguish? Probably. Brun probed that reaction, testing her own composure. Could she trust herself to stay this calm under the certain pressures of the Council meeting? She let her mind throw up images of her mother, her father, Sirialis. The face in the mirror did not change.
The great starry-roofed chamber might have imposed its own serenity on the anthill of scurrying humans below its dome, but familiarity had dulled their responses. Intent on their own concerns, their own worries and ambitions, most of them didn’t even glance at the painted stars, or the Family mottoes blazoned around the rim of the dome. Brun, arriving early, had the time, and the inclination, to look around. Now, watching the other Seated Members coming in, she ran over the points she must make. How would her words affect these people, most of them so wealthy they had no idea how much they owned—how many worlds, how many people, how many things? Would they shrug and say it had nothing to do with them, what happened ten or twenty light-years away?
The Consellines, bereft of Hobart Conselline, were in as much disarray as the Barracloughs had been when Bunny died. Hobart had systematically destroyed a dozen able Conselline politicians on his own climb to power. Would this consolidate their vote, making them cling harder to any perceived Conselline interest, or would it open them up, make them more receptive to the interest of the Familias as a whole?
She couldn’t know that for sure, she could only know what Stepan told her of the Barraclough Sept’s situation. She watched as her cousin Kell came down the steps and hesitated at the Family Table. She hoped she was right that mercy here would not be misplaced and gave him a steady look as she nodded towards his Seat. He looked grumpy, but then he usually did.
“I don’t know where my father is,” he said. “So don’t ask.”
“I do,” Brun said.
His expression changed to alarm. “Where? Did you have him thrown in prison, or what?”
“He hired a mutineer to take him to Sirialis,” Brun said.
“What?! You’re lying!”
“No,” Brun said, amazed at her own calm. She felt almost as Miranda had always looked, and from the look on Kell’s face that’s what he was seeing in her. “I’m not lying, and that’s what he did. It was really quite foolish. It makes us look bad—”
“Huh?”
“To the other septs,” Brun went on. “To have a Thornbuckle, a Barraclough, making deals with mutineers for private business. Very bad.”
“Then why’d Uncle Stepan let me take my Seat?”
“He didn’t want to,” Brun said. She gave him another long look. “I insisted. I’m not feuding with you. This is no time for intrafamily feuds.”
“You’re . . . different,” Kell said.
“Yes. Being a captive, having children, and losing your parents does that to you,” Brun said. “Danger, they say, has a wonderful ability to concentrate attention.”
“Dad never had a chance, did he?” Kell asked suddenly.
“Not really, not in the long run,” Brun said. “Why?”
“He always said your father was soft underneath—that he got the prestige just because of his smooth manner and his connections.” He hesitated then plunged on. “He said that’s why he sent Fleet after you . . . that anyone stupid enough to get picked up like that deserved what she got.”
“Then I trust he won’t be upset to realize that we’re not going to rescue him from the mutineers,” Brun said crisply. Kell stared. “Kell, your father’s hired some of the most dangerous men in our universe—he’s gone off with them alone. Do you think they’ll respect his noble birth and take his orders if they don’t like them?”
“But—but he’s rich—”
“And wealth buys things, Kell. Things. People’s loyalty has a higher price, which your father has never learned to pay. He’s chosen men who have no respect for riches—oh, they want riches, but that’s different. They respect strength, personal courage, personal fitness. They will take his riches and—if he’s lucky—kill him quickly.”
Kell paled. “Are you serious? You really think—”
“I’ve seen the dossier on the man he hired, and some of his crew.”
“Can’t you do something?”
“Like what? Beg Fleet to go after him? Listen to my speech, Kell, and you’ll understand why not.”
Kell looked around. “Are any of the others coming? Buttons? Dot?”
“No. They’ve registered their proxies.”
The great chamber was less than two-thirds full; many members had been unable to return for another session and had registered proxies with their Family representative. Brun compared the Seats taken with her display. Stepan, to her left and two levels higher, smiled and nodded when she glanced his way; she nodded in return. Viktor, beside him, pretended to glower. To the right, Ronnie’s father among the other Carrutherses and Ronnie, far older than when she’d seen him last. She pressed her comm control and beeped him. He looked up.