The trio entered the room, passing a bottle among them. From the smell of their breath as they strode past Adele
she was surprised they were still able to move, let alone climb the lovely helical staircase to the third floor.
Three other assistants were in the library. Two were fondling one another in a corner. Their lives were at risk if in
passion they managed to dislodge the boxes stacked to either side. The third assistant was Vanness, who was actually
trying to organize a crate of what were probably logbooks. Alone of her “assistants,” Vanness had the interest that
was a necessary precondition to becoming useful. The Kostroman wasn’t any real help now, but Adele could cure his
ignorance if she just got some room to work in.
“Hey, save me seconds!” Bracey called to the couple in the corner. Adele’s presence hadn’t concerned them, but
now they sprang apart.
One of Bracey’s companions tugged his arm, nodding toward Adele behind them. Bracey waved the bottle to her
and said, “Hey, chiefie! Want a drink?”
Bracey burped loudly; his companions lapsed into giggles. Adele looked through the Kostroman as if he didn’t
exist, then walked to the data console she’d spent most of the past two weeks getting in order because that was
within her capacity to achieve without the help of anyone else . . . and she didn’t have the help of anyone else.
The console was of high-quality Cinnabar manufacture and so new that it was still crated in the vestibule of the
palace when Walter’s supporters took stock after the coup. It came loaded with a broad-ranging database which
could, now that Adele had completed her labors, access information from any of the computers in the government
network; better and faster than the computers could reach their own data, in most cases.
Adele rested her forehead against the console’s smooth coolness and wondered whether starving on Bryce would
have been a better idea than accepting the Kostroman offer. But it had seemed so wonderful at the time. She’d even
told Mistress Boileau, “It’s too good to be true!”
Adele smiled. At least in hindsight she could credit herself with a flawlessly accurate analysis.
Adele was a Mundy of Chatsworth, one of Cinnabar’s most politically powerful families while she was growing
up, though the Mundys’ populist tendencies meant they were generally on the outs with their fellow magnates. Adele
hadn’t been interested in politics. When she was sixteen she’d left Xenos for the Bryce Academy. Her choice was
made as much to avoid the alarms and street protests escalating into riots as for the opportunity to study the premier
collections of the human galaxy under Mistress Boileau.
That was fifteen terrestrial years ago. Three days after Adele Mundy reached Bryce, the Speaker of the Cinnabar
Senate announced that he’d uncovered an Alliance plot to overthrow the government of Cinnabar through native
agents—primarily members of the Mundy family. The Senate proscribed the traitors. Their property was confiscated
by the state or turned over to those who informed against them, and those proscribed were hunted down under
emergency regulations that were a license to kill.
Adele had a bank account on Bryce, but it was intended to provide her first quarter’s allowance rather than an
inheritance. Mistress Boileau herself replaced the support which had vanished with the Mundys of Chatsworth. Her
charity was partly from kindness, because the old scholar’s heart was as gentle as a lamb’s on any subject outside her
specialty: the collection and organization of knowledge.
But beyond kindness Mistress Boileau realized Adele was a student with abilities exceeding those of anyone else
she had trained in her long career. They worked on terms of increasing equality, Adele’s quickness balanced by the
breadth of information within Mistress Boileau’s crystalline mind. Nothing was said, but both of them expected
Adele to take Mistress Boileau’s place when the older woman died at her post—retirement was as unlikely a
possibility as the immediate end of the universe.
Maybe without the war . . .
Cinnabar and the Alliance had fought three wars in the past century. This fourth outbreak had less to do with the
so-called Three Circles Conspiracy than it did with the same trade, pride, and paranoia which had led to the earlier
conflicts. Those were politicians’ reasons and fools’ reasons; nothing that touched a scholar like Adele Mundy.
But the decree that came out of the Alliance capital on Pleasaunce touched her, for all that it was framed by
politicians and fools. The Academic Collections on Bryce were a national resource. Access to them by citizens of the
Republic of Cinnabar was to be strictly controlled.
Mistress Boileau suggested a way out of the crisis. She had friends on Pleasaunce. They couldn’t exempt Adele
from the ruling, but they could make Adele an Alliance citizen as soon as she renounced Cinnabar nationality.
A moment earlier Adele would have described herself as a citizen of learning and the galaxy, not of any national
boundary that tried to limit mankind. Cinnabar was a memory of the riots she saw in person and the slaughter she
missed by hours.
But she was a Mundy of Chatsworth, and she would be damned before any politician on Pleasaunce made her say
otherwise.
Then the Elector of Kostroma asked Mistress Boileau, Director of the Academic Collections on Bryce, to