Ivan bends over far enough to whisper in Miles's ear: "It was Lord Yenaro's gift to the Marilacan embassy. Don't be a lout, Miles, you know how sensitive the Cetagandans are about their artsy, uh, things."
"I'm not really qualified to judge aesthetics," he says as they descend the stairs, because he certainly isn't by Cetagandan standards and the last thing he wants is to struggle to explain his wordless emotional impression of the piece's seasonal cycle to this fluttery ghem-lordling.
"It does seem to me to be a considerable technical achievement," he says, steering the conversation onto a topic he is comfortable discussing. "Do you drive the motion with anti-grav, then?" A technology with which he is particularly familiar - he's lost count of the time he's spent slithering around on grav-crutches after an unlucky fall broke one or both legs. He hates the things even more than he hates the steel leg braces, currently concealed under his uniform trousers, that he wears to prevent more such incidents.
"Technicians? I somehow pictured you putting all this together with your own hands," he says, eyeing the sculpture as they stand at the walk-through entrance - presumably to await the beginning of the cycle. (He isn't sure why he pictured such a thing; the image is more than a little bizarre. The well-dressed Yenaro seems better suited to whisking around in a small organized laboratory working on small organized creations, an image which Miles can conjure without difficulty.)
"I must disagree," says Miles. "In my experience, hands are integral with brains, almost another lobe for intelligence. What one does not know through one's hands, one does not truly know."
"Um - maybe." He consults his memory of the funerary schedule: the suggested evening is free of ceremonial obligations. An opportunity to socialize with the younger ghem-lords, to see what they're like outside the no doubt constraining presence of their elders - to look into the future of Cetaganda, in a sense. "Yes, why not?"
From the inside the view is less easily rendered by the observer into fascinating apophenia, although the music is clearer.
Yenaro starts talking about the technical details. "Now, you'll see something -"
The tingling sensation rapidly becomes less faint.
He bolts for the entrance, along the artistically winding paths, not daring to step foot in the temptingly cool water lest something electrical happen to him in this artifact that has already proven treacherous. His leg braces are scalding hot. Abandoning dignity as a priority wholly overridden by the circumstances, he sprawls on the floor and hauls at his trousers until he can reach the braces' clamps. Not surprisingly, they're hot enough to burn his fingers. He yanks his boots off, tries again, and this time gets the braces unfastened. Off they come, shoved aside violently in his hurry to escape them; then there's nothing left to do but curl up in a miserable ball and hiss curses under his breath, trying not to let anything whatsoever touch the horrific blisters that now pattern both his legs from knee to ankle.
Yenaro yells for help; Ivan plows through the mob towards his cousin, anxious.
"I'm all right," Miles lies, unclenching his teeth as best he can. There are staring diplomats and socialites everywhere, a whole crowd focused on his display; he pulls his trouser legs down, preferring the discomfort of fabric on his blistered shins to the discomfort of strangers' eyes.
Ivan bends to poke one of the braces, no longer quite so hot to the touch. "Yes, what the hell?"
"I think it was some sort of electro-hysteresis effect. The colour changes in the display are apparently driven by a reversing magnetic field at low level. No problem for most people. For me, well, it wasn't quite as bad as shoving my leg braces into a microwave, but—you get the idea."
He gets to his feet, producing a nice big grin from somewhere along the way, and staggers Ivanward. "Get me out of here," he mutters from as close a range as possible, trying to control his shivers.
Ambassador Berneaux approaches, apologizes, offers the infirmary's use. Ivan scampers to get the groundcar sent out.
"No. Thank you," grits Miles, to the ambassador's offer. "I'll wait till we get home, thanks." And hope most fervently that they get home as soon as humanly possible.
In said groundcar, Ivan doffs his tunic and drapes it around his shivering cousin.
"All right, let's see the damages," he demands, and he collects a Miles-foot and rolls up the trouser leg. "Damn, that's got to hurt."
"It could hardly have been an assassination attempt, though," says Vorob'yev.
"No," agrees Miles.
"Bernaux told me he had his own security people examine the sculpture before they installed it. Looking for bombs and bugs, of course, but they cleared it."
"I'm sure they did," agrees Miles. "This could not have hurt anyone... but me."
"A trap?" says Vorob'yev, easily following Miles along this chain of reasoning.
Which can only be by deliberate design, if it was indeed a trap... a trap of surpassing subtlety. Almost Cetagandan, you might say.
"It had to have taken days, maybe weeks, of preparation. We didn't even know we were coming here till two weeks ago. When did it arrive at the Marilacan embassy?"
"Last night, according to Bernaux," Vorob'yev supplies.
"Before we even arrived." Therefore, also before they met the mystery fugitive. Logically speaking, it couldn't possibly have followed from that incident. Miles is not wholly sure he trusts the comforting solidity of this logic. "How long have we been scheduled for that party?"
"The embassies arranged the invitations about three days ago."
"Provisionally," Miles allows.
The hell it is. That accident was targeted with exquisite care and attention, and knowledge of his particular weaknesses - knowledge that anyone could likely find on public information networks, granted, but they'd still have to spend the time to dig it up. This is the opening salvo of some subtle war.
If only he had the slightest clue who was on the other side.
The one thing he knows for damn sure is that he is going to Lord Yenaro's party come hell or high water.
The Celestial Garden is the Cetegandan imperial residence. It is enclosed entirely by an opalescent force dome - an enormous one. The skyscrapers around it and the park ringing its border form a sort of bowl in which it rests, egglike, boulevards fanning out beyond the park ring in eight directions. Ivan and Miles are apparently to be placed in the "dress rehearsal" they're about to attend as though they are second-order ghem-lords. They're all three in House mourning uniforms, since after all the real reason they are here is that someone has died.
They have no escort; only the Emperor of Cetaganda, himself, could arrange an assassination here, and if he wanted to a squad of bodyguards wouldn't stop him. They change vehicles, are waved through by appropriately mournful personages, observe trees and the private little buildings nestled between them, are ushered along still further in. The hall they turn up in is tastefully decorated, little indoor garden tidbits here and there not interfering a whit with rather miraculous acoustics.
There are a couple of floating pearly spheres drifting along at the far end of one branch of the room. Haut-ladies. Wrapped up in force-bubbles generated by float-chairs, whenever outside their private quarters. White, today, for the occasion; Cetagandan mourning color. If this denies outsiders the opportunity to look at haut-ladies, that does not bother those haut-ladies, certainly; it also denies outsiders the opportunity to shoot at them. (There is a haut-lord, over there, plainly visible, accompanied by ghem-guards.)
A lord accepts Gregor's gift's documentation from Miles's hand; a sword Dorca Vorbarra the Just carried in the First Cetagandan War. Documented provenance. The sword itself they have to lug a bit longer. He invites Miles to convey his own Imperial master's thanks to Miles's.