Oh, he wishes to hell he knew what he was doing. All he has to go on right now is intuition, theories - dreams. Soap bubbles.
"Give me a chance."
Ivan comes back in a bit later, but before he even opens his mouth, the comconsole chimes:
"Mia Maz is here to see you, Lord Vorkosigan. She says she has an appointment."
"That's correct," he answers. "Uh - can you bring her up here, please?"
Mia Maz is promptly ensconced up in their suite, and Ivan sends the staffer for wine and tea, and Maz sits down.
"You must be good at keeping a straight face," he muses. "Or you could not function so well here."
"My mother would agree with you," says Miles. "She would have seen no inherent difference between the two corpses in the rotunda. Except their method of arriving there, of course. I take it this suicide was an unusual and unprecedented event?"
"So Cetagandan servants do not routinely accompany their masters in death like a pagan sacrifice... Ivan was wondering if the haut-lords cloned their servants," he says.
"The ghem-lords sometimes do," Maz says. "But not the haut-lords, and most certainly never the Imperial Household. They consider each servitor as much a work of art as any of the other objects with which they surround themselves. Everything in the Celestial Garden must be unique, if possible handmade, and perfect. That applies to their biological constructs as well. They leave mass production to the masses. I'm not sure if it's a virtue or a vice, the way the haut do it, but in a world flooded with virtual realities and infinite duplication, it's strangely refreshing. If only they weren't such awful snobs about it."
"Speaking of things artistic - you said you had some luck identifying that icon?"
"A great deal of time, yes," sighs Ivan.
"The Star Creche," continues Maz, "is the private name of the haut-race's gene bank."
"Oh, that. I was dimly aware of - do they keep backup copies of themselves, then?"
"The Star Creche is far more than that. Among the haut, they don't deal directly with each other to have egg and sperm united and the resulting embryo deposited in a uterine replicator, the way normal people do. Every genetic cross is negotiated and a contract drawn between the heads of the two genetic lines - the Cetegandans call them constellations, though I suppose you Barrayarans would call them clans. That contract in turn must be approved by the Emperor, or rather, by the senior female in the Emperor's line, and marked by the seal of the Star Creche. For the last half-century, since the present regime began, that senior female has been haut Rian Degtiar, the Emperor's mother. It's not just a formality, either. Any genetic alterations — and the haut do a lot of them — have to be examined and cleared by the Empress's board of geneticists, before they are allowed into the haut genome. You asked me if the haut-women had any power. The Dowager Empress had final approval or veto over every haut birth."
Maybe she'll drop the word Handmaiden in here somewhere and he can be reassured on that point too.
"Ah! Now you've touched on something interesting," says Maz, warmly didactic. "Nobody knows, or at least, the Emperor hasn't made the public announcement. The seal is supposed to be held by the Emperor's mother if she lives, or by the mother of the heir-apparent if the dowager is deceased. But the Cetagandan emperor has not yet selected his heir. The seal of the Star Crèche and all the rest of the empress's regalia is supposed to be handed over to the new senior female as the last act of the funeral rites, so he has ten more days to make up his mind. I imagine that decision is the focus of a great deal of attention right now, among the haut-women. No new genomic contracts can be approved until the transfer is completed."
"So - he has three young sons, right? Does it go to one of their mothers, or...?"