
Even if it would have been helpful if he'd been able to give a modicum of his attention to dealing with this other little problem , the diplomat thought grimly.
"I'm talking about the Talbott Cluster, Rajani," he said out loud, letting just a trace of over-tried patience into his voice. "I'm talking about that incident between your Admiral Byng and the Manties."
"What about it?" Rajampet's tone was suddenly a bit cautious, his eyes wary, as instincts honed by a T-century of bureaucratic infighting reared their heads.
"It would appear the Manties were just as pissed off as their original note indicated they were," Kolokoltsov told him.
"And?" Rajampet's eyes turned warier than ever and he seemed to settle back into his chair.
"And they weren't joking about sending their Admiral Gold Peak to inquire into matters on the ground in New Tuscany."
"They weren't?" The question came from Wodoslawski, not Rajampet, and Kolokoltsov glanced at her.
She was twenty-five T-years younger than he was—a third-gerneration prolong recipient with dark red hair, gray eyes, and quite an attractive figure. She was also fairly new to her position as the real head of the Treasury Department, and she'd received it, following her predecesor's demise, only as a compromise between the other permanent senior undersecretaries. She knew perfectly well that she'd been everyone else's second choice—that all her current colleagues had allies they would really have preferred to see in that slot. But she'd been there for over a decade, now, and she'd solidified her powerbase quite nicely.
