Lois Bujold - Mirror Dance

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Mirror Dance: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Not everyone would envy young Lord Miles Naismith Vorkosigan, even though he had formed his own mercenary fleet before attending the naval academy, and even though his mother was the beautiful Cordelia, the ship captain who has taught the Lords of Barrayar much about the perils of sexism. Even the fact that Miles is the third in line to the throne and personally owns a major chunk of his home planet would not tempt any normal person to change places with him.
When assassins came to rid the world of his father, his mother, pregnant with Miles, was in the line of fire, and Miles was but an egg for the omelet in an all too literal sense. Thanks to heroic medical intervention, Miles survived his near fatal brush with war gas—as a pain-filled dwarf with bones as weak and brittle as some malign composite of chalk and glass. Miles is often mistaken for a mutant by his mutant-loathing countrymen.

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Around a corner. There. A three-story, pleasant white building with lots of plants and landscaping, big windows, balconies. Not quite a hospital, not quite a dormitory, vague, ambiguous, discreet. the life house it was labelled in Jacksonian double-speak. The death house. My dear old home. It was terribly familiar and terribly strange. Once, it had seemed quite splendid to him. Now it seemed … smaller than he remembered.

Taura raised her plasma arc, adjusted its beam to wide, and removed the locked glass front doors in an orange, white, and blue spray of flying, spattering melt. Dendarii bounded through, splitting right and left, before the glow of the spattered globs of glass died. One took up station patrolling the ground floor. Alarms and fire alarms went off: Dendarii killed the noisy speakers they passed with more plasma fire, on the fly, but units in more distant parts of the building kept up a muted clamor. Automatic sprinklers made steam and a mess in their trail.

He ran to catch up. A uniformed Bharaputran security guard in brown trimmed with pink lurched into the corridor ahead. Three Dendarii stunners simultaneously downed him as his own stunner beam was absorbed harmlessly by the ceiling.

Taura and two female Dendarii took the lift tube toward the third floor; another trooper passed them in hope of gaining the roof. He led Thorne and the remaining troopers out into the second floor foyer and to the left. Two unarmed adults, one a night-gowned woman pulling on a robe, were felled the instant they appeared. There. Through those double doors. They were locked, and someone was beating on them from the inside.

“We’re going to break the door open,” Thorne bellowed through it. “Back away, or you’ll get hurt!” The pounding stopped. Thorne nodded. A trooper adjusted his plasma arc to narrow beam, and sliced through a metal bolt. Thorne kicked the doors wide.

A blond young man fell back a pace, and stared at Thorne with bewilderment. “You’re not the firemen.”

A crowd of other men, tall boys, filled the corridor behind the blond. He did not have to remind himself that these were a bunch of ten-year-olds, but he wasn’t sure about the perceptions of the troopers. Every variation of height and racial mix and build was represented, much more motley than the Greek-god look one might have anticipated from their garden-and-fountain setting. Personal wealth, not personal beauty, had been the ticket for their creation. Still, each was as glowingly healthy as the particularities of his genetics permitted. They all wore uniform sleepwear, bronze-brown tunics and shorts. “Front,” Thorne hissed, and shoved him forward. “Start talking.” “Get me a head-count,” he ripped out of the corner of his mouth as Thorne pulled him past. “Right.”

He’d practiced the speech for this supreme moment in his mind ten thousand times, every possible variation. The only thing he knew for certain that he was not going to start with was, I’m Miles Naismith. His heart was racing. He inhaled a huge gulp of air. “We’re the Dendarii Mercenaries, and we’re here to save you.”

The boy’s expression was repelled, scared, and scornful all mixed. “You look like a mushroom,” he said blankly.

It was so … so off-script. Of his thousand rehearsed second lines, not one followed this. Actually, with the command helmet and all, he probably did look a bit like a big gray— not the heroic image he’d hoped to—

He tore off his helmet, ripped back his hood, and bared his teeth. The boy recoiled.

“Listen up, you clones!” he yelled. “The secret you may have heard whispered is true! Every single one of you is waiting in line to be murdered by House Bharaputra surgeons. They’re gonna stick somebody else’s brain in your head, and throw your brain away. That’s where your friends have been going, one by one, to their deaths. We’re here to take you to Escobar, where you’ll be given sanctuary—” Not all the boys had assembled in the corridor in the first place, and now ones at the rear of the mob began to break away and retreat into individual rooms. A babble started to rise from them, and yells and cries. One dark-haired boy tried to dart past them to the corridor beyond the big double doors, and a trooper grabbed him in a standard arm-lock. He screamed in pain and surprise, and the sound and shock seemed to blow the others back in a wave. The boy struggled without effect in the trooper’s iron grip. The trooper looked exasperated and uncertain, and stared at him as if expecting some direction or order. “Get your friends and follow me!” he yelled desperately to the retreating boys. The blond turned on his heel and sprinted.

“I don’t think they bought us,” said Thorne. The hermaphrodite’s face was pale and tense. “It might actually be easier to stun them all and carry them. We can’t afford to lose time in here, not with that iamned thin perimeter.”

“No—”

His helmet was calling him. He jammed it back on. Comm-link babble burst in his ears, but Sergeant Taura’s deep voice penetrated, selectively enhanced by her channel. “Sir, we need your help up here.”

“What is it?”

Her answer was lost in an override from the woman riding the float-bike. “Sir, there’s three or four people climbing down the outside balconies of the building you’re in. And there’s a group of four Bharaputran security people approaching you from the north.”

He sorted frantically through channels till he found the one outgoing to the air-guard. “Don’t let any get away!”

“How should I stop ’em, sir?” Her voice was edged.

“Stunner,” he decided helplessly. “Wait! Don’t stun any that are hanging off the balcony, wait’ll they reach the ground.”

“I may not have a clear shot.”

“Do your best.” He cut her off and found Taura again. “What do you want, Sergeant?”

“I want you to come talk to this crazy girl. You can convince her if anyone can.”

“Things are—not quite under control down here.”

Thorne rolled its eyes. The captured boy was drumming his bare heels against the Dendarii trooper’s shins. Thorne set its stunner to the lightest setting, and touched it to the back of the squirming boy’s neck. He convulsed and hung more limply. Still conscious, eyes blearing and wild, the boy began to cry.

In a burst of cowardice he said to Throne, “Get them rounded up. Any way you can. I’m going to help Sergeant Taura.”

“You do that,” growled Thorne in a distinctly insubordinate tone. It wheeled, gathering its men. “You and you, take that side—you, take the other. Get those doors down—”

He retreated ignominiously to the sound of shattering plastic.

Upstairs, things were quieter. There were fewer girls than boys altogether, a disproportion that had also prevailed in his time. He’d often wondered why. He stepped over the stunned body of a heavy-set female security guard, and followed his vid map, projected by his helmet, to Sergeant Taura.

A dozen or so girls were seated cross-legged on the floor, their hands clasped behind their necks, under the waving threat of one Dendarii’s stunner. Their sleep-tunics and shorts were pink silk, otherwise identical to the boys’. They looked frightened, but at least they sat silent. He stepped into a side room to find Taura and the other trooper confronting a tall Eurasian girl-woman, who sat at a comconsole with her arms aggressively crossed. Where the vid plate should have been was a smoking hole, hot and recent, from plasma fire.

The Eurasian girl’s head turned, her long black hair swinging, from Taura to himself and back. “My lady, what a circus!” Her voice was a whip of contempt.

“She refuses to budge,” said Taura. Her tone was strangely worried.

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