139
who ought to have a minimal knowledge of professional ethics and proper behavior ...”
Lunzie*s anger finally caught up with her surprise. She yanked her arm free.
“Which does not include grabbing my arm and scolding me in public as if you were my father. Which you’re not. May I remind you that I am considerably older than you, and if I choose to . .
To what? She hadn’t done what Bias thought she had done. In some respect, she agreed with him. If she had been having a torrid affair with the head of External Security, it would have been unprofessional and stupid. In Bias’s place, in charge of a younger (older?) woman doing something like that, she’d have been irritated, too. She’d been irritated enough when she thought Varian was attracted to the young Ire tan, Aygar. Her anger left as quickly as it had come, replaced by her sense of humor. She struggled for a moment with these contradictory feelings, and then laughed. Bias was white-faced, his mouth pinched tight.
“Bias, I am not sleeping with Zebara. He’s an old friend.”
“Everyone knows what happens at that opera!”
“I didn’t.” That much was true. “And how did you know?”
This time it was Bias who reddened, in unattractive blotches. “The last time I came I ... ah. Um. I’ve always liked music. I try to learn about the native music anywhere I go. A performance was advertised. I bought a ticket, I went. And they didn’t want to let me in. No one admitted without a partner, they said.”
Lunzie hadn’t known that. After a moment’s shock, she realized that it made sense. Bias, it seemed, had argued that he had already paid for the ticket. He had been given his money back, with the contemptuous suggestion that he put his ticket where it would do him more good than the performance would. He finally found a heavyworlder doctor, at the medical center, willing to explain what the opera was about, and why no one wanted him there.
“So you see I know that no matter what you say ...”
140
Lunzie stopped that with a laugh. They entered the lift with a crowd of first-shift medical personnel and Bias kept silence until they reached their floor. He opened his mouth but she waved him to silence.
“Bias, it came as a surprise to me, too. But they don’t . . . mmm. Check on it. Besides which,” and she cocked her head at him, “there’s the problem of a pressure suit.”
Bias turned beet-red from scalp to neck. His mouth opened and closed as if he were gasping for air, but formed no words.
“It’s all right, Bias,” she said, patting his head as if he were a nervous boy about to go onstage. “I’m over a hundred years old and I didn’t live this long by risking an unexpected pregnancy.”
Then, before she lost control of her wayward humor, she strode quickly down the corridor to her own first chore.
But Bias was not the only one to broach the subject.
“I’ve heard that heavyworlder opera is really something, hmm? Different ...” said Conigan. She did not quite smirk.
Lunzie managed placidity. “Different is hardly the word, but you may have heard more than I saw.”