“Unless they’re secessionists, of course,” Tully said, exaggerating his Arkansas accent a little. “Sir.”
John Rolfe shot him a sharp glance, then smiled wryly. “That isn’t the most tactful possible remark in this house, Mr. Tully,” he said dryly. “Still testing, eh? No, I won’t send for the headsman. Let me rephrase my remark: a treasonous conspiracy in the sort of society we’ve established here. Aristocratic polities are prone to faction, but the factions tend to be personal, rather than dividing on matters of principle. That… simplifies things, shall we say. Unless the system has broken down completely, it also makes bloodbaths like the War of Southern Independence unlikely; there isn’t enough at stake for ordinary folk to make mass mobilization possible.”
“There’s a great deal at stake here, sir,” Adrienne said.
“In the long run, my dear. In the long run. In the short run, which is where most human beings live most of the time, it would be only a change of personnel at the top—I doubt Giovanni would go in for a widespread purge, and he cannot afford to fatally alienate all the Families, even if his coup were to succeed. That’s why a civil war would be inadvisable, as well as disastrous—too few would stay willing to fight when the damage grew great enough.”
A long silence fell; Tom began to wonder whether the elderly Rolfe had fallen asleep. Then the older man’s eyes snapped open again.
“There are two ways to approach this. I can use the means at my disposal, and Charles’s, but we will have to be extremely cautious. If we alert the Collettas, they might try to strike at once out of desperation—possibly succeeding, possibly bringing on a real civil war here.”
“If we’re too cautious, they may strike while we’re still dithering, sir,” Adrienne said.
“Only too true, my dear. Although we are somewhat forewarned, which means they cannot achieve complete surprise.”
He brooded for a moment. “The Collettas can’t possibly think to raise the necessary force from their affiliation. For one thing, it would be too conspicuous; for another, they’re not popular enough with their clients to be able to call on them to fight the Commission. Not all of them, and not quickly.”
Adrienne nodded. “We’ve done some research, sir. Tom and his friend have identified a crucial factor, we think.”
The pouched, faded green eyes turned on him. Military habit stiffened Tom’s spine. “It’s Colletta Air, sir,” he said. “They’re a wholly owned Family company; they use modified C-130s, mostly. The records on your computer system—Nostradamus—look clean, but I think that over the past decade they could have, ah, lost a number of them. That would be enough to bring in a battalion, and from a considerable distance. There’s a lot of wilderness out there.”
Adrienne nodded. “And I think that the only way to get enough men would be to recruit locally. Well, locally as in this side of the Gate. From somewhere in Mexico or points south.”
The elder Rolfe nodded. “Perhaps; it’s a solid line of reasoning, at least. In theory, with the ability to fiddle with Nostradamus, you could slip recruits in as ordinary nahua contract workers… use some outlying property of the Collettas as a base. I suppose the Batyushkovs could provide cadre and training, and some Versfeld dissidents; they’d have a lot more recent combat veterans than the clients of any other Families, and they could bring them across as Settlers… quietly divert arms from militia requirements over a number of years… hmmm.”
“Is that enough for you to launch a question before the committee, sir?” she asked eagerly.
Rolfe sighed. “No,” he said. “For the same reason—unless we know they’re not ready, it might provoke an immediate strike. Charles must have hard evidence, and then we can ram through a suspension of the guilty Families’ powers immediately, paralyze them… most of their affiliations would sit on their hands in that event, and we could be certain of a quick, relatively bloodless end to this monstrosity.”
He stubbed out the cigarillo. “We have moral certainty. We need proof and details. As I said, Charles and I will have to move very cautiously, and also cautiously begin some other precautions in case things go badly wrong.”
Adrienne wet her lips. “Sir… perhaps I could investigate as well. I’d certainly be less conspicuous than any direct agents of the Rolfe Family’s security force or household troops, and since the GSF is compromised…”
“Yes,” her grandfather said. “I’m afraid you’re right, my dear.”
“I’d appreciate authorization,” she said frankly. “I may have to use… questionable… quasi-legal… methods.”
“By all means,” he said. Then one corner of his mouth quirked up. “By all means.”
He opened the drawer of the table and drew out a sheet of heavy cream paper and a circle of sealing wax. Then he took a fountain pen from the breast pocket of his jacket and spoke the words in a murmur as he wrote in an elegant copperplate: “June sixteenth, 2009: The bearer… has done what has been done… by my authority… and for the good of the State.”
He signed it with a quick, powerful scrawl—John Rolfe, Chairman Emeritus—then peeled the protective paper disks off the sealing wax, attached it by the signature and stamped it with a signet ring he wore on the third finger of his right hand—a VMI class ring, Tom realized. He folded it, tucked it into an envelope, sealed that likewise and handed it to Adrienne. Tully and Adrienne were smiling; Tom exchanged a look of bafflement with Piet Botha, and then they both shrugged.
“Do be careful, milady,” the head of the Rolfes said dryly. “I’ve just given you a blank check. I suggest you be extremely cautious in attracting the attention of the Collettas or Batyushkovs. The death of Anthony Bosco is going to raise enough of a fuss as it is. Move slowly, when you’re where they can see you.”
“Phew,” Tom said when they were back in the Hummer.
Adrienne chuckled as the tires crunched on the white rock of the roadway. “It can be a bit overwhelming, meeting the Old Man for the first time. I’m afraid we’re going to have to do as he suggested: move slowly, when every instinct I’ve got screams at me to hit them high and low right away. It’d be a dead giveaway I had emergency business if I ran off somewhere else in the middle of the harvest.”
She shook her head and sighed. “Well, there’s one cure for the jitters, and it’s one we’ve got available, thank God.”
“Which is?” Tom said.
“Physical labor,” she said cheerfully.
Tully groaned.
Giovanni Colletta had visited the Owens Valley many times before, beginning as a young boy with his father; it was an outlier of the Family domain, and the hunting was excellent. Theoretically, that was why he and the Batyushkov were here now.
“An excellent choice of location, Dimitri,” he said. “Not only of a convenient layout and size, but isolated—without a land-link connection to Nostradamus, for instance, and not on any regular flyway.”
“Khorosho,” the Russian agreed. Excellent.
He’d had several vodkas; he wasn’t drunk, but his cheeks were a little flushed. The Colletta wished he could drink; he’d never liked flying, but he maintained an iron self-control. And if you had to fly, a customized C-130 was about as comfortable as you could possibly want. His technicians simply loaded a giant container through the big rear ramp of the transport aircraft and into the square hold. He had a suite of rooms that could be transported anywhere in the Commonwealth he needed to go; when he didn’t need them, the whole mass could be extracted and the aircraft returned to regular service. Best of all, there were no windows unless you went forward and up a staircase to the control deck, and you could pretend you were on the ground.