“My father!” That with a snarl. “Easy enough for him to send me off without even my servants.”
“If either you or your . . . double . . . had been cooperative, we might have been able to improve matters,” Heris pointed out. “Now that we’re under way, suppose you tell us which you are.”
“Which?”
Heris wished she dared smack him. “Whether you are the prince, or he’s the fellow down the corridor,” she said.
“Oh.” He appeared to ponder that much longer than necessary. “I . . . don’t think either of us is the prince,” he said.
“You don’t think,” Heris said. Was he trying to be cute, or could he possibly not know?
“No . . . I’m not entirely sure. I mean, I know I’m not the prince. But we switch around so much, you know, that I rather lose track.”
“All clones?” Heris asked. “All his clones?”
“I suppose so,” the young man said. “I never really thought.”
“And do you have a name? When you aren’t using the prince’s, I mean?”
“Mr. Smith,” he said, with a grin. “Gerald Smith. It’s all I’ve ever been called. We all use it—his name is Gerel, so ours had to be close enough that his would be familiar, and yet not the same. My middle initial’s B, and I’m the second one.”
Heris wanted to ask him if they were all as stupid as the prince himself, but thought better of it. More important at the moment was the size of her problem. “How many of you clones are there?”
“Three, at least,” he said promptly. “I went through the first stages of training with two others; our fourth had a metabolic problem and died early. But we might not have been the only cluster. On the other hand, we’re almost never all together, so if one of us died in the line of duty, the others wouldn’t know.”
If there were three clones—or more—then the putative prince Livadhi had might not be the prince at all. “Why so many? I thought clones were expensive, and the confusion must have been difficult—”
He shrugged. “We’re also prone to losses in the early embryonic stages, just as nonclones are. Given the expense, they don’t take chances; they bring a cluster along together. If it’s absolutely necessary to have a clone in place—as it is here—it’s much safer to have a spare or two.”
“Or three,” Heris said. Where was the prince himself? With Livadhi? Somewhere else? “By any chance, was another clone on Naverrn? Or the prince himself?”
“No—I was primary, this trip, and Gerald C. was secondary. At least, I think that’s Gerald C. you’ve got in the other room. I don’t know where Gerald A. or Gerel Prime is.”
“Gerel Prime being your code name for the prince?” The clone nodded. Heris could not see any difference between him and the prince she had transported from Sirialis. If that had been the prince—she had a sudden chilling suspicion that maybe her passenger had been one of the other clones, and the prince himself not involved in any of that mess. Yet the king clearly thought that had been the real one.
“How are you briefed about the prince’s activities?” Heris asked. A minor matter now, but it might provide useful information. “Surely all of you must be kept up-to-date on his recent actions—and he on yours. Who monitors your . . . ah . . . personal interactions, and your personality profile?”
“We all carry implanted recorders,” the clone said. She had trouble thinking of him as Gerald B., but she made herself repeat it silently. This was Gerald B., an individual, though genetically identical . . . “They’re harvested regularly, by a Crown-certified technician, and we’re retaped with the others at the same time. Usually takes a couple of hours. I’ve been told the prince is also equipped for retaping.”
“Like training tapes?” Heris asked.
The clone—Gerald B., she reminded herself again—frowned. “I’ve been told it’s like the military training tapes, the ones used before simulator training.”
“Ah.” With the right drug induction, those were powerful—one could almost believe one had already been through the simulators.
“As for the personality profile, we’re evaluated on that at every retaping, as we are for physical parameters.” Heris noted that Gerald B. seemed a lot more cooperative now than he had been, and wondered why. Did he have some conditioned response to a phrase she’d used, or was the admission of his clone identity a releaser for more cooperation? “That’s why I’m not sure about the others,” he went on. “We’re not encouraged to concern ourselves with the actual identity of the person presenting himself as the prince. Nor are we encouraged to form independent relationships with each other. We’re just doubles; our value lies in being mistaken for the prince, not each other.”
What a sad life, Heris thought. But as if he’d read her mind, Gerald B. grinned at her. “Don’t pity me,” he said. “I see so many singletons trying to be mistaken for a parent, a mentor, a patron . . . they, who could be themselves wholly and freely, choose to copy another almost as closely as I must. So it can’t be that bad. Besides—my prime is a wealthy, privileged young man. I enjoy those advantages even when I’m not on.”
True, but such a philosophical outlook was nothing like the prince as Heris had known him. Were they as bright as the prince should have been? And if so, how did they feign stupidity? Did they know it was stupidity they were feigning? “Have you been retaped on what happened at Sirialis?” she asked.
“Oh, yes. A courier brought both physician and tapes . . . it was an emergency, such a dramatic break. Actually there was some concern that Gerald A., who had been first doubling right then, should have broken his role to inform the authorities when the prince left, but it was decided once more that our role should be confined to doubling, not surveillance.”
Curiouser and curiouser. Gerald B. began to sound more and more intelligent and mature. That alone made it likely he wasn’t the prince; he could feign stupidity more easily than a stupid person could feign intelligence. But—again she wondered if the real prince had been the one drugged.
“So . . . you would not know from seeing someone on a ship-to-ship video if it were the prince or another clone?”
“Nor just from seeing him. Only if he broke role, and revealed himself.”
Livadhi arrived at the rendezvous an hour after Heris, weapons dark to her scan. A good sign, if he hadn’t managed to fox her scans. Nor did his weapons light, though he must have known hers were hot. Slowly, they brought the ships close, cutting the delay in communication so it was hardly noticeable.
“You don’t entirely trust me,” Livadhi said.
“No—should I?” Heris gestured around her. “You know these people—members of my crew, court-martialed with false evidence, imprisoned. Too many of them died. Where were you, Livadhi? When I needed friends in the Fleet, when I needed someone to testify at my own hearing?”
His eyes fell. “I was . . . convinced you had done what they said. Sorry, Heris, but that’s the truth. Your own cousin Marlon—your uncle Sabado—I thought if they spoke against you, with such sorrow and regret, it must be true.”
“Yet you had known me.” She wasn’t as angry as she’d expected to be. His lack of support hurt, but it had melted into the general pain that none of her friends at Fleet had come to her aid. She shrugged, putting aside that aspect of the situation. “You wonder why I don’t trust you now? That’s the smallest part of it. You’ve heard about Lepescu?”
“Only that he died, and rumor said discreditably.” His eyes glittered; she could almost see the questions struggling for precedence in his head.
“He was involved in a group that hunted humans for sport,” Heris said. His eyes widened; even with what he knew of Lepescu that shocked him. “He was killed, and the surviving victims freed. More than that I should not say.”