climbers like Marina Rolfe. To them Adele's return gave the neighborhood the cachet of a real
aristocrat's presence; they'd made very sure that their servants were properly obsequious.
Adele couldn't imagine what her neighbors made of the fact that Mundy of Chatsworth was a
naval officer; and a warrant officer besides, a mere technician instead of a dashing commissioned
officer like her tenant, Daniel Leary. Aristocrats were allowed to be eccentric, of course.
"Mistress?" Tovera said again.
"Am I eccentric, Tovera?" Adele asked, glancing over her shoulder.
"I wouldn't know, mistress," Tovera said. "You'd have to ask someone who understands what
'normal' means."
Adele grimaced. "I'm sorry, Tovera," she said. "It's not something I should joke about."
As Adele and her entourage approached the stop, an east-bound tram pulled onto the
siding.Another monorail car clattered past on the main line, heading west toward the great
roundabout in the center of Xenos. By law only the Militia, the national police, could own aircars
within the municipal limits of the capital; the likelihood that a touchy rival aristocrat would shoot
down a private aircar passing overhead made the law more effective than merely legal sanctions
could have done.
Many of the great houses had their own tramcars which teams of servants set on the rail when
their master or mistress chose to go out. Adele had a respectable nest egg in the form of prize
money gathered while under the command of Lieutenant Leary, but she couldn't have afforded
such an establishment even if she'd seen any use for it.
She'd gotten used to taking care of herself; she preferred it that way now. She had Tovera, of
course, but it was easy to forget that Tovera was human.
A footman ran ahead to engage the tram that'd just stopped, saving Adele the delay before
another car arrived in answer to the call button in the kiosk. At this time of day that might be as
much as half an hour. The funeral was being held at a chapel near Harbor Three, the great naval
base on the northern outskirts of Xenos. Adele had allowed enough time—of course—but she
preferred to be a trifle early than to miss the start of the rites because of a run of bad luck.
Adele Mundy had seen a great deal of luck in her 32 years. Quite a lot of it had been bad.
The man who got off the tram wore a hard-used, one might almost say ragged, RCN 2nd class
uniform, gray with black piping. It was the minimum standard of dress required for off-duty
officers in public, though given its condition—there were oil stains on the left cuff and a mended
tear on the right pants leg—the powers that be in the Navy Office might have been better served
had the fellow donned clean fatigues instead.
The recent armistice between Cinnabar and the Alliance of Free Stars had led to the
decommissioning of many ships and the consequent relegation of officers to half-pay status. For
those who didn't have private means, half-pay was a sentence of destitution. This was obviously
an unfortunate who couldn't afford to maintain his wardrobe—
"That's Lieutenant Mon," Tovera murmured in her ear.
"Good God, it is," Adele blurted under her breath. She'd unconsciously averted her eyes in
embarrassment; poor herself for most of her adult life, she had no desire to wallow in the poverty
of others.
Such concerns didn't touch Tovera any more than love or hate did. The man coming toward
them was a potential enemy—everyone was a potential enemy to Tovera—so she'd looked