Mark Pierre Vorkosigan / "Peter Kane" (
jacksonian) wrote in
barrayar2016-01-22 09:49 pm
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I am junking up this beautiful community with this junk
All the other starters are so beautiful but instead I'm coming in and ruining everything with this useless post with this sad sack
Comment to this post and I will write you something
Comment to this post and I will write you something
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What is the worst outcome of letting this play out? Giving up his own identity as Miles Vorkosigan? He'd already done that for the public eye when he took up the Naismith mantle instead - and it's not as though Gregor would be fooled. One telepathic prod would be the only thing needed. So ... let it play out. After all, one should never interrupt an enemy when they're making a mistake.
(If it's a mistake. Maybe he's the one making the mistake. God, what a mess he's made already.)
Regardless, he eyes "Vorkosigan" with the wariness he deserves after a comment like that. And says the first thing that pops into his head: ]
Oh, god. Don't tell me you wanted me for sex. Were you really that desperate?
I liked v.1 very much
It's true that there have been clones made for that purpose. He knows that very well. But - We're repulsive. Our body is repulsive. And it's because of you, or him, or maybe the Butcher's perversions and love of sodomy or his evil wife's insane experimentations - But regardless. Who would want this? And his horror makes him run his mouth off a bit too much. ]
No! That's - Absolutely not. And it wouldn't even make sense - House Bharaputra, you said, not House Ryoval... [ And then he realizes: he's not supposed to have that much knowledge of Jackson's Whole. He tries to recover, acting like he needs confirmation. ] That's the one that does that sort of thing, right? Anyway, I said I didn't order you made. Someone else did.
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He suspects that he can fill in the technical details of his own story if he goads "Vorkosigan" at just the right moments. Better do that rather than get himself caught in a tangle that he can't explain his way out of. ]
Who, then? I was hardly told anything. Only that I was supposed to be a copy of this Vor lord, and that escape would mean he would be after me just as hard.
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Honestly? We don't know. I don't know if ImpSec knows, or if Illyan's just keeping it a secret from us. But there's been intel that someone made a clone as part of some plot against my-father-the-Count. [ Vorkosigan so often says that as a phrase, all in one rush, with just the faintest hint of drollness - like it's an inside joke, with no concern for who or who isn't on the inside of that joke. Part of his charisma, the clone had always noticed. He assumes you're one of his, and then you just fall into being his. Not like Galen with his revolutionaries - Galen kept control through hard dedication to a mutual ideal of a free Komarr. The Jacksonians kept loyalty through money, and lots of it. Vorkosigan gets loyalty by just demanding it, and for some reason people give it.
The clone prefers the Jacksonian model. ]
That might be you. It's starting to sound like that's you.
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So ... something else. Another sort of replacement. A plot against this father does make more sense. He begins to pace a bit, the gesture a singularly Naismith one that he had picked up during his adventures. (Well. Not completely. But more pronounced, nowadays.) ]
I assure you, I have no such intentions. I'd much rather stay far away. As far away as possible.
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Think you might tell Illyan that? It'd save me having to memorize all those passwords that I need to recite to prove I'm still me. To say nothing of keeping him from going gray quite so fast.
[ What are you doing? Passing along Galen's ramblings about ways this plot could be foiled... Well, what he's doing, he guesses, is making himself convincingly Lord Vorkosigan. ]
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Ha. As if you could get me that close to Simon Illyan. I'm not a complete idiot, you know. I wouldn't come back from that encounter intact.
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I wouldn't come back intact, either. ]
So you know who that is, at least. How much do you know about Barrayar? And how did you become Miles Naismith? Did my mother's Betan relatives help you?
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[ Hmm. That's an excellent suggestion, actually. It suits, neatly, and he can think of enough holes in his own history that would allow a clone a brief window to contact the Naismiths and be gone. ]
Yes, however briefly. They were my first stop - or rather, Beta Colony was. A much friendlier place for an escaped clone to get off to. They have this wild idea that I'm rightfully the Count's son in my own right.
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[ Hole in your story, Naismith. Let me help you with that... ]
But - Greg Vorthys? There's another Vor here?
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[ Right back at you. At the mention of Gregor, though, Miles can't help but brighten. He has too much affection for the man to do otherwise. ]
A practically exiled one. He ran - I know how you Barrayarans are about that.
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And - he ran? I know how you are about that? Do Barrayarans run? Is that a crack about Vorkosigan? They've been chasing him for so long as he hares off from planet to planet - Is it some observation that Naismith has made about his progenitor, that Vorkosigan runs? The clone plays it safe, turns it into a joke: ]
You'll have to forgive us. We're only just now getting our chance. We were held in captivity for a very long time - it's exciting, getting to test your freedom for the first time.
So it's not all Vor you want to keep away from.
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[ There's a hole for you, brother-clone. Best patch it fast.
Now that he's past the initial shock, it's almost ... fun playing this game against a version of himself. Testing his own cover, feeling it out against someone who probably won't kill him. Probably. (Surely Miles would be dead by now if that were the point - his neck is fragile enough, among other things.) He makes a mental note to tell Gregor all the details later and decide what they ought to do long term. In the meantime it seems fruitful to continue to Naismith as hard as possible.
In any case, his reactions to the topic of "Greg" continue to be blissfully honest. The easiest part of the whole thing. ]
I take Vor one at a time, please and thank you. He has proved to be exceptional beyond measure. [ A beat. ] Even you may not be so bad if you don't intend to kill me just yet.
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(The clone wants to be sick. He's making mistakes. Lots of mistakes. He can't afford to make mistakes. Galen taught him that - he has to be completely perfect in his cover. He needs to learn quickly, learn everything he can from Vorkosigan. Or Naismith. Whoever this is. He can feel the acidic sourness of that cheese in his stomach and wants to go throw it all up right at once. What happens if his cover falls apart? What does Vorkosigan do then?
(Who does he become then?) ]
Thanks. I think.
[ A wry smile covers up all his screaming nerves and chattering thoughts. ]
Anyway, of course I don't intend to kill you. I can't say I'm happy that this whole clone thing is turning out to be true, but that doesn't mean I have any hostility towards you. You didn't ask for this.
[ There. That's about as much kindness as he'd give a clone. Seems plausible. ]
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Because that is truly who this man in front of him would be. His brother, under Betan law and his mother. His father ... a harder sell, he thinks, but he's sure the man would come around in the end. He'd had to think through the scenario himself while discussing his family as Naismith.
He must win this man over, one way or another. As Naismith if possible - that seems a much safer choice than upending the man's cover. He knows too well how much identity can be tied up in such a thing. And he has no idea who this man considers himself to be under all that ... Let the man have Vorkosigan, for now, and see what happens. ]
Neither did you, apparently. That ... resolves the worst of my issues. Admittedly. [ Reluctantly, like he's just now deciding to trust Vorkosigan. Which he is. ] I had almost hoped for a villain.
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It's weird, though, looking in the face of his future victim. His own face. Killing himself. It's very...Shit. Very in line with...Freud? Jung? Vorkosigan would know which one, wouldn't he. Genius that he is.
You'll get a villain yet.
He hesitates. He knows...The smart thing to do will be to take this opportunity to get to know him. Study him. Learn his habits. That's what he'd be ordered to do. But...But he'll get found out if he stays. He knows it. Vorkosigan will get tired of this game and act. Or - or something. And it's...He can't even imagine sharing a house with him. He can't imagine what will happen if he ends up growing some sort of sympathy for him. That's what might happen, right? He'll come under his sway. This would keep emotional distance...
Or maybe I'm just scared to have to be stacked up next to the original every day. ]
I'll see what I can do about getting moved out. I can't think you'd want to see me all the time. Even if I'm not a villain.
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... They could be murdered anyway, one day. The best defense is a good offense. The decision is made in an instant, and a brilliant smile - the likes of which would only be seen on Naismith and not Vorkosigan - cracks his face. ]
On the contrary. I'd like you to stay, if Greg doesn't mind the occasional confusion. If you [romise not to change your mind about not minding having a clone later?
[ And more genuine sentiment bubbles to the top of his mind, wild with the sudden thought. ]
Under Betan law, we'd be brothers anyway.
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What? What insanity is this? The clone can't help himself. He stares at Naismith with confusion - and not a bit of suspicion - and not a bit of horror, too. Brothers. Vorkosigan is no brother to him. Naismith wouldn't be, either. Is that really Betan law? Further proof that Betans are all lunatics. His closest family is a uterine replicator. His only family. And clones from his creche whose personalities are now no more than incinerated bio-waste. So what sort of provocation is this meant to be? What kind of test? Did he say that just to provoke the clone into reacting with appropriate revulsion?
Brothers.
Nonsense. Nonsense. He tries to shake himself mentally, like a dog shedding water - but unfortunately, like for that dog, like with water, the sheer ridiculous insanity clings to his memory. Brothers. His voice is a little too harsh and a little too strident for cheery, babbly Lord Vorkosigan. But he feels like the reaction is about right. ]
That was a quick jump - from fear to wanting to inherit in less than a minute.
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[ He can feel that familiar momentum starting up, the sort that usually results in really good or really bad ideas. He has no idea which one this is yet. It's exhilarating. For just a moment, he pauses to savor the thrill of adrenaline going through him. ]
My greatest strength as Admiral is in recognizing good personnel, and promptly drafting them. In that, my snap judgments are usually the best.
[ His grin is somehow still brighter. Manic and wild with possibility. ]
What do you say, Lord Miles? Fancy having a little brother?
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A little brother. He's insane. He's completely insane... He licks his lips. ]
It seems like there are...two different things going on there. Are you recruiting personnel, or applying to become part of my family?
[ How is it possible to pronounce my family wrong? There aren't any vowels that ought to be able to be said incorrectly in there. In a Barrayaran accent it sounds just the same as in his native Jacksonian accent. And yet still it comes out sounding incorrect. ]
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Both, really. We are trying to get the Dendarii back up and running again here, but - yes, one thing at a time. Is there a form I should fill out? A test I ought to pass? Oh, the good doctors did take that blood sample last month - you really ought to meet Hermann, we may make his head explode --
[ The words just keep coming, and coming, and coming. ]
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I don't think Betan law really holds on Barrayar, so -
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[ He's a little breathless himself, at the end of all that. ]
What do you want?
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That question makes the clone's brain sort of...grind to a halt. What do I want? What does it matter what he wants? It's...It's not like he hasn't been asked that question before. He's heard the question before. But...it was always a question from his Jacksonian servant/captors about what he'd like to eat for dinner. It was never what do you want to do - because that was determined for him, whether it was exercise or another trip to the doctor to have a crippling brace put on his back to force him into a hunch. Never what do you want your future to be. No one asked that. No one bothered. And the past four years, since the Komarrans came for him...No. Never. Never that question. What a joke to think he would ever be asked that question. He had a destiny, and if he second-guessed that destiny then he'd see the end of a shock-stick. That was it. So he's never had to answer the question before, never...
And so the clone just stares at Naismith. He stares at him, uncomprehending, trying to process how he should answer that question. Trying to process what that question even means. ]
no subject
Maybe it will help to lay it out for him. Less overwhelmingly blank freedom, there. ]
I figure we have a few options. We could be enemies, but that would be a waste. Besides, we resurrect automatically after a few days, so if you decided to kill me I'd just come back quite angry.
[ A warning, that. Make it clear there's no reason to even attempt it. ]
We could avoid each other. But that would be a waste too. Either way, as soon as you get on the network as Lord Vorkosigan, you're likely to get some angry responses. I ... er, I should probably deflect those, especially since you are not actually responsible for my existence.
[ On a couple levels. ]
Or - we could be friends. Siblings. I would like that very much. It would be a bit confusing with two Miles in close proximity, but we could work it out. And, well - Barrayaran patronymics being what they are, a second son can really only have one name anyway.
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